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THE MASONIC INITIATION 


TO ALL BUILDERS IN THE SPIRIT 

BY 

W. L. WILMSHURST 



The Sequel to The Meaning Of Masonry 




THE MASONIC INITIATION 


Masonry and Religion 
Introduction 
W. L. WILMSHURST 


This book is meant to be a sequel to, and an amplification of, my previous volume, The Meaning of 
Masonry, first published in 1922— a collection of papers issued diffidently and tentatively on the 
chance that they might interest some few members of the Craft in the deeper and philosophic aspect 
of Freemasonry. It at once met, however, with a surprisingly warm welcome from all parts of the 
world, and already has had to be thrice reprinted. Any personal pleasure at its reception is eclipsed 
by a greater gratification and thankfulness at the now demonstrated fact that the present large and 
rapid increase in the number of the Fraternity is being accompanied by a correspondingly wide 
desire to realize the significance and purpose of the Masonic system to a much fuller degree than till 
now has been the case. The Masonic Craft seems to be gradually regenerating itself, and, as I 
previously indicated, such a regeneration must needs make not only for the moral benefit and 
enlightenment of individuals and Lodges, but ultimately must react favourably upon the framework 
in which they exist -the whole body of society . 

In these circumstances it becomes possible to speak more fully, perhaps also more feelingly, upon a 
subject which, as a large volume of public and private testimony has revealed to me, is engaging the 
earnest interest of large numbers of Brethren of the Craft. So I offer them these further papers, 
[presenting the same subject-matter as before, but induction different form and expounding more 
fully matters previously treated but superficially and cursorily. 

By "the Masonic Initiation" I mean, of course, not merely the act and rite of reception into the 
Order, but Speculative Freemasonry-within the limits of the Craft and Arch Degrees-regarded as a 
system, a specialized method of intellectual guidance and spiritual instruction ; a method which to 
its willing and attentive devotees offers at once an interpretation of life, a rule of living, and a 
means of grace, introduction, and even intromission, to life and light of a supra-natural order . 
Masonry being essentially and expressedly a quest after supranatural Light, the present papers are 
schematically arranged in correspondence with the stages of that quest ; they deal first with the 
transition from darkness to light ; next with the pathway itself and the light to be found thereon ; 
and, lastly, with light in its fullness of attainment as the result of faithfully pursuing that path to the 
end. - In a final paper I have re-surveyed the Order's past and indicated its present tendencies and 
future possibilities 

In their zeal to appreciate and make the best of their connection with the Order, some members, one 
finds, experience difficulty in defining and "placing" Freemasonry . Is it Religion, Philosophy, a 
system of morals, or what ? In view of the deepening interest in the subject, it may be well at the 
outset to clear up this point . Masonry is not a Religion, though it contains marked religious 
elements and many religious references . A Brother may legitimately say, if he wishes, -and many 
do say-"Masonry is my religion," but he is not justified in classifying and holding it out to other 
people as a Religion. Reference to the Constitutions makes it quite clear that the system is one 
meant to exist outside and independently of Religion ; that all the Order requires of its members is a 
belief in Deity and personal conformation to the Moral Law, every Brother being free to follow 
whatsoever form of religion and mode of worship he pleases . 


Neither is Masonry a Philosophy ; albeit behind it lies a large philosophical background not 
appearing in its surface-rituals and doctrine, but left for discovery to the research and effort of the 
Brethren . That philosophical background is a Gnosis or Wisdom-teaching as old as the world, one 
which has been shared alike by the Vedists of the East, the Egyptian, Chaldean and Orphic 
Initiation systems, the Pythagorean and Platonist schools, and all the Mystery Temples of both the 
past and the present, Christian or otherwise. The present renaissance in the Masonic Order is 
calculated to cause a marked, if gradual, revival of interest in that philosophy, with the probable 
eventual result that there will come about a general restoration of the Mysteries, inhibited during the 
last sixteen centuries . But of this more will be said in the final section of this book 

The official description of Masonry is that it is a "System of Morality." This is true, but in two 
senses, one only of which is usually thought of . The term is usually interpreted as meaning a 
"system of morals." But men need not enter a secret order to learn morals and study ethics ; nor is 
an elaborate duction ceremonial organization needed to teach them. Elementary morals can be, and 
are, learned in the outside world ; and must be learned there if one is to be merely a decent member 
of society . The possession of "strict morals," as every Mason knows, is a preliminary qualification 
for entering the Order ; a man does not enter it to acquire them after he has entered . It is true he 
finds the Order insistent on obedience to the Moral Law and emphasising closer cultivation of 
certain ethical virtues, as is essential to those who propose to enter upon a course of spiritual 
science ; and this is the primary, more obvious sense in which the term "system of morality" is used 


But the word "morality," in its original, and also in its Masonic, connotation, has a further meaning 
; one carrying the same sense as it does when we speak of a "morality-play ." A "morality" is a 
literary or dramatic way of expressing spiritual truth, putting it forward allegorically and in 
accordance with certain well-settled principles and methods (mores) ; it is the equivalent of a usage 
or "use," as ecclesiastics speak of "the Sarum use" or liturgy . In the same sense Plutarch's Moralia 
is largely a series of disquisitions upon the mores of the ancient religious Mystery-schools . 

A "system of morality," therefore, means secondarily" a systematized and dramatized method of 
moral discipline and philosophic instruction, based on ancient usage and long established practice ." 
The method in question is that of Initiation ; the usage and practice is that of allegory and symbol, 
which it is the Freemason's duty, if he wishes to understand his system, to labour to interpret and 
put to personal application. If he fails to do so, he still remains and the system deliberately intends 
that he should in the dark about the Order's real meaning and secrets, although formally a member 
of it . The Order, the morality-system, merely guarantees its own possession of Truth ; it does not 
undertake to impart it save to those who labour for it . For Truth and its real arcana can never be 
communicated directly, or save through allegory and symbol, myth and sacrament. The onus of 
translating these must ever rest with the recipient as part .-of his lifework ; until he makes the truth 
his own he can never know it to be truth ; he must do the will before he can know the doctrine . "I 
know not how it is" (said St. Bernard of Clairvaux of allegory and symbol) "but the more that 
spiritual realities are clothed with obscuring veils, the more they delight and attract ; and nothing so 
much heightens longing for them as such tender refusal." 

Masonry, then, -as a "system of morality" as thus defined-is neither a Religion nor a Philosophy, but 
at once a Science and an Art, a Theory and a Practice ; and this was ever the way in which the 
Schools of the Ancient Wisdom and Mysteries proceeded. They first exhibited to the intending 
disciple a picture of the Life-process ; they taught him the story of the soul's genesis and descent 
into this world ; they showed him its present imperfect, restricted state and its unfortunate position ; 
they indicated that there was a scientific method by which it might be perfected and regain its 
original condition . This was the Science-half of their systems, the programme or theory placed 
induction advance before disciples, that they might have a thorough intellectual grasp of the 



purpose of the Mysteries and what admission to them involved . Then followed the other half ; the 
practical work to be done by the disciple upon himself, in purifying himself ; controlling his sense- 
nature ; correcting natural undisciplined tendencies ; mastering his thought, his mental processes 
and will, by a rigorous rule of life and art of living . When he showed proficiency in both the theory 
and the practice, and could withstand certain tests, then but not before he was allowed the privilege 
of Initiation-a secret process, conferred by already initiated Masters or experts, the details of which 
were never disclosed outside the process itself. 

Such, in a few words, was the age-old science of the Mysteries, whether in Egypt, Greece or 
elsewhere, and it is that science which, in very compressed, diluted form, is perpetuated and 
reproduced in modem Masonry. To emphasizing and demonstrating this fact, both the present and 
my former volume are devoted ; their purpose being coupled with a hope that, when the true 
intention of the Order is perceived, the Craft may begin to fulfill its original design and become an 
instrument of real initiating efficiency instead of, as hitherto, a merely social and charitable 
institution . Indeed the place and office of Masonry cannot be adequately appreciated without 
acquaintance with the Mysteries Masonry of antiquity, for, as a poet (Patmore) wrote who knew and 
the latter perfectly, 

Save by the Old Road none attain the new, 

And from the Ancient Hills alone we catch the view ! 

Masonry having the above purpose, whilst not a religion, is consistent with and adaptable to any 
and every religion. But it is capable of going further. For an Order of Initiation (like the monastic 
Orders within the older Churches) is intended to provide a higher standard of instruction, a larger 
communication of truth and wisdom, than the elementary ones offered by public popular religion ; 
and at the same time it requires more rigorous personal discipline and imposes much more exacting 
claims upon the mind and will of its adherents . The popular religious teaching of any people, 
Christian or not, is as it were for the masses as yet incapable of stronger food and unadapted to 
rigorous discipline ; it is accommodated to the simple understanding of the man in the street, jog- 
trotting along the road of life. Initiation is meant for the expert, the determined spiritual athlete, 
ready to face the deeper mysteries of being, and resolute to attain, as soon as may be, the heights to 
which he knows his own spirit, when awakened, can take him. 

Is not the present declension of interest in popular religion and public worship due-far from entirely, 
yet largely-not to irreligiousness, but to the fact that conventional religious presentation does not 
satisfy the rational and spiritual needs of a public forced and disciplined by the exigencies of 
modem existence to insist upon a clear understanding and a firm intellectual foothold in respect of 
any form of venture duction it is called upon to undertake ? Is not the turn-over of so many 
essentially religiously-minded and earnestly questing people from the Churches to variants of 
religious expression, including Masonry, due largely to that reason and to the fact that the Churches, 
whilst inculcating faith, offering hope, proclaiming love, fail entirely in providing what the 
Mysteries of the past always did-such a clear philosophical explanation of life and the Universe as 
provided-not proof, which in regard to ultimate verities it is impossible to offer-but an intellectual 
motive for turning from things of sense to things of spirit ? 

Nothing is further from my wish or intention in these pages than to extol Masonry at the expense of 
any existing Religion or Church, or to suggest competition between institutions which are not and 
can never be competitors, but complementaries . I am merely asserting the simple obvious facts that 
popular favour has turned, and will more and more turn, to that market which best supplies its 
needs, and that for many nowadays the Churches fail to supply those needs, or form at best an 
inferior or inadequate source of supply. The growing human intelligence has outgrown-not religious 



truth but presentations of it that sufficed in less exacting social conditions than obtain to-day, and it 
is calling for more sustaining nutriment. 


It may be useful to recall how the position was viewed not long ago by an advanced mind racially 
detached from the religion and ways of the Western world. A Hindu religious Master, an Initiate, 
who attended the World's Congress of Religions at Chicago as the representative of the Vedantists, 
made an observational tour of America and Europe with a view to sympathetically understanding 
and appraising their religious organizations and methods. His conclusions may be summarized thus 
:"The Western ideal is to be doing (to be active) ; the Eastern, to be suffering (to be passive) . The 
perfect life would be a wonderful harmony of the two . Western religious organizations (Churches 
and sects) involve grave disadvantages ; for they are always breeding new evils, which are not 
known to the East with its absence of organization . The perfect condition would come from a true 
blending of these opposite methods . For the Western soul, it is well for a man to be born in a 
Church, but terrible for him to die in one ; for in religion there must be growth. A young man is to 
be censured who fails to attend and learn from the Church of his nation ; the elderly man is equally 
to be censured if he does attend he ought to have outgrown what that Church offers and to have 
attained a higher order of religious life and understanding ." 

The same conclusion was expressed by an eminent and ardent religionist of our own country :"The 
work of the Church in the world is not to teach the mysteries of life, so much as to persuade the soul 
to that arduous degree of purity at which Deity Himself becomes her teacher . The work of the 
Church ends when the knowledge of God begins ."In other words Initiation science (in a real and 
not merely a ceremonial sense) is needed and commences to be applicable only when elementary 
spiritual tuition has been assimilated and richer nourishment is called for. The same writer, though a 
zealous member of the Roman Church, affirms frankly and truly that in any age of the world, the 
real Initiate of the Mysteries, whatever his race or national religion, must needs always stand higher 
in spiritual wisdom and stature than the non- initiate of the Christian or any other faith . 

Such testimonies as these point to-what many others will feel to be a necessity-the need of some 
complementary, supplementary aid to popular Religion ; some Higher Grade School, in the greater 
seclusion and privacy of which can be both studied and practized lessons in the secrets and 
mysteries of our being which cannot be exhibited coram populo . Such an aid is provided by a 
Secret Order, an Initiation system, and is at hand in Freemasonry . It remains to be seen whether the 
Masonic Craft, in both its own and the larger ulterior interest of society, will avail itself of the 
opportunity in its hands . There being a tendency in that direction in the Craft to-day, the pages of 
this and of my former book are offered to encouraging that tendency to a fruition that could not 
make otherwise than for the general good. 

But let those of us who are desirous to farther that tendency, and to see provided an advanced 
system of spiritual instruction, never entertain a notion of competing with any other community, or 
permit ourselves a single thought of disparagement or contempt towards either those who learn or 
those who teach in other places . Life involves growth . The hyacinth-bulb in the pot before me will 
not remain a bulb, whose life and stature are to be restricted to the level of the pot it has been placed 
in. It will shoot up a foot higher and there burst in flower and fragrance, albeit that its roots remain 
in the soil. Similarly each human life is as a bulb providentially planted in some pot, in some 
Religion, some Church. If it truly fulfils the law and central instincts of its nature it will outgrow 
that pot, rise high above the pot's surface- level, and ultimately blossom in a consciousness 
transcending anything it knew whilst in the bulb stage . That consciousness will be one not of the 
beginner, the student, the neophyte in the Mysteries ; it will be that of the full Initiate . 

But that perfected life will still be rooted in the soil, and, far from despising it, will be for ever 
grateful for the pot in which its growth became possible . Masonry will, therefore, never disparage 



simpler or less advanced forms of intellectual or spiritual instruction . The Mason, above all men 
and in a much fuller, deeper sense, will respond to the old ordinance "Honour thy father and mother 
In whatever form, under whichsoever of the many names the God- idea presents itself to himself 
or his fellow-men, he will honour the Universal Father ; and in whatsoever soil of Mother-Earth, or 
whichsoever section of Mother-Church, he or they have received their infant nurture, he will honour 
that Mother, even as he is bound also to honour his own Mother Lodge ; seeing in each of these the 
temporal reflection of still another Mother, the supernal parent described as "the Mother of us all." 

Upon one other point I must add a word. A duction writer wishing to help on the understanding of 
Masonry, as fully as may be, in the interests of Brethren who, as events have shown, are waiting in 
numbers to receive and ready to turn to account such help as may be given, is put to real anxiety to 
find a way of so writing that he simultaneously discharges the combined duty of extending that help 
and of observing his own obligations as to silence. 

In my former volume I explained that, in respect of necessary safeguards, all due secrecy should be 
observed; and the assurance is now repeated in respect of the present one. No non-Mason need look 
to find in these pages any of the distinctive secrets of the Craft; no Mason, I believe, will trace in 
them any disloyal word or motive, or recognize in them anything but earnest anxiousness to 
promote the Craft's interests to the uttermost. Moreover the things I permit myself to say are, I 
conceive, exempt from silence as regards the Craft, for they are things which justly and lawfully 
belong to it and properly concern it ; and since its members, near and far, in full measure and in 
many ways have proved themselves worthy of such confidence as I can show them, I feel myself 
justified in addressing them more intimately than before . As regards those outside the Craft, into 
whose hands a published book cannot be prevented form falling, what I have written consists of 
things already spoken about at large in other forms of expression in these days of keen search for 
guidance upon the dark path of human life ; and let me here say that as warm, and almost as many, 
appreciations of my former volume have reached me from non-Masons as from within the Craft, 
and that it has attracted to the Order much sympathy and good-will that did not previously exist . 

Doubtless there are eyes of such strictness that they regard any public mention of the Masonic 
subject as an impropriety. Even these I would not willingly offend ; yet to allow a possible 
technicality to prevent the giving, to those seeking it, the only gift I can make to the Craft in return 
for what it has given to myself, seems to me less meritorious Masonic conduct than would be the 
negative virtue of keeping rigid silence when so much can usefully be said. 

So I take comfort from that ancient word of wisdom which proclaims that "He that observes the 
wind shall not sow, and he that observes the clouds will not reap 1" And though, whilst writing 
these pages, a morning desire to sow my seed has often been followed by an evening prompting to 
withhold my hand, yet the former has prevailed with me . And if of that seed, some falls upon 
Masonic and some chances upon other ground, who shall know whether shall prosper this or that ? ; 
but I pray that both shall be alike good. For, continues the same old Sage, "truly Light is sweet, and 
a precious thing it is for the eyes to behold the Sun" ; and to-day there are drawn blinds everywhere 
waiting to be lifted, to let in a Sunlight that belongs to no close community, but to all men al ik e. 

So having, I hope, brought myself to order in this respect, and marking with thankful eyes the 
sunrise of a new order of intelligence breaking over the Brotherhood, let me now proceed, in the 
one Name that is thought of under many names, to declare the Lodge open, for the purpose of 
considering Craft-Masonry in all its degrees. 



THE MASONIC INITIATION 


From Darkness to Light 
CHAPTER I 


W. L. WILMSHURST 


No more needed and useful work is to be done in the Masonic Order to-day than the education of its 
members in the true purpose of rites of initiation, that they may the better appreciate the reason, the 
importance, and the seriousness, of the work the Order was designed to achieve. 

Hitherto that educative work has been grievously neglected, with prejudicial results to the Craft 
through the admission of candidates little adapted to appreciate its purpose . Some members have 
no wish to be masonically educated . They are content to be Masons in name only, and are satisfied 
that the monotonous, mechanical repetition of unexplained ceremonies and side-lectures fulfils 
every requisite, and conveys all that is to be known . Yet in every Lodge are to be found brethren 
who are asking for something more than this, who know that the Craft was designed for wider and 
better ends; who, as earnest seekers after Wisdom and Light, entered the Order in the hope of 
finding them, but who too often are repelled by what they do find there, or lose interest on their 
needs being left unprovided for. It is in the special interest of this worthier type of Mason that this 
address is given . 

We greatly need competent, trained exponents of the meaning and symbolism of the Craft ; not 
merely teachers of the letter of its rituals and lectures . The duty and responsibility of providing this 
wider instruction surely lies upon those holding the rank of Installed Master. Is not their place in 
that East from which real Light should continually be coming, and whence they are supposed to 
employ and instruct in Masonic science those who sit in less or greater degrees of darkness in other 
symbolic quarters of the Lodge ? Are they not the figurative representatives of royal Solomon, and 
symbolic mouthpieces of a more than human Wisdom ? Over each of them has there not been raised 
a most solemn petition that they may be endued with wisdom to comprehend, judgment to define, 
and ability to enforce obedience to the holy law declaring the conditions upon which real Initiation 
depends, so that they may effectively enlighten the minds of their Brethren ? How many Installed 
Masters are conscious in their hearts of possessing, or of even striving to acquire, that wisdom, that 
understanding of our science, that power of raising others from darkness to Light in any real and 
vital sense ? 

Now you have called me to the presidency of this large Association of Installed Masters, whose 
function is to farther the best interests of the Craft in this district. In accepting that position of 
honour, can I better use it than by inviting you, my Worshipful Colleagues, to consider with me 
some lines upon which true Masonic instruction should be directed, so that we may combine in 
raising the general level of Masonic science in our respective Lodges, and at least try to justify more 
fully our pretension to be Masters of it ? 

My purpose now, therefore, is, firstly, to give some idea of what real Initiation involves, and to 
show how great a difference exists between it and mere formal passage through the ceremonies of 
the Craft. Secondly, it is to explain what Initiation meant and still means in the more secret and 
advanced systems out of which modern Masonry has sprung as a comparatively new branch from a 


very ancient tree . And lastly, it is to indicate how, and with what greater efficacy, our Lodge-work 
might be conducted if we better realized the true nature and purpose of the Order. 


INITIATION, REAL AND CEREMONIAL 

It may be a surprise to some members of our Craft to be told that our ceremonial rites, as at present 
performed, do not constitute or confer real Initiation at all, in the original sense of admitting a man 
to the solemn mysteries of the human soul, and to practical experience in divine science. The words 
"Initiation" and "Mysteries" have become so popularized and debased that they are nowadays used 
in relation to familiarizing anyone with the methods of, say, the Stock Exchange, or any other 
pursuit with which he is unacquainted. 

We profess to confer Initiation, but few Masons know what real Initiation involves ; very few, one 
fears, would ' have the wish, the courage, or the willingness to make the necessary sacrifices to 
attain it if they did. Nevertheless our Craft Degrees give us a rough outline and fragmentary sketch 
of what the real process entails, and they leave it with ourselves either to amplify that sketch by our 
own efforts and to make its implications such a reality that our whole life becomes transformed in 
consequence, or to treat it as so much ceremonial through which we are only to pass formally, 
leaving our old imperfect nature not a whit changed by the process. 

Now if Masonry, with its solemn prayers, assurances and pledges, means anything, its true purpose 
is to promote the spiritual life and development of its members to a degree far in advance of what it 
accomplishes at present. Otherwise it remains but a social formality, while its obligations and 
religious references are apt to lapse into profanity or even blasphemy. To prevent this there is 
needed a dear grasp of the fundamental purpose of an initiatory system and the reason for its 
existence, after which one can proceed more advantageously to understanding its degrees and 
symbols in detail. For without such knowledge and understanding there can be no real power, no 
spiritual driving-force, behind our rites; and without that power ceremonies are but perfunctory, 
inefficacious formalities. Ceremonies were instituted originally to give an external form to an 
internal act; but where the internal power to perform such acts does not exist, a ceremony will avail 
nothing and achieve nothing. You can go on making nominal Masons by the thousand, but you will 
only be creating a large organization of men who remain as unenlightened in the Mysteries as they 
always were. You cannot make a single real Initiate, save, as our teaching indicates, by the help of 
God and the earnest intelligent co-operation of those qualified to assist to the Light a fellow-being 
who, from his heart and not merely from his lips, desires that Light, humbly confessing himself 
spiritually poor, worthless, immersed in darkness, and unable to find that Light elsewhere or by his 
own efforts . For real Initiation means an expansion of consciousness from the human to the divine 
level . 

Every system of real Initiation, whether of the past or present, is divided into three clear-cut stages ; 
since before anyone can pass from his natural darkness to the Light supernal and discover the 
Blazing Star or Glory at his own centre, there are three distinct tasks to be achieved. They are as 
follows : 

First, the turning away from the attractions of the outer world, involving detachment from the 
allurements of all that is meant by "money and metals," and the purification and subdual of the 
bodily and sensual tendencies . Not everyone is able or ripe for doing this ; the natural life 
maintains a powerful hold over us, and our ingrained habits are not readily changed . Yet as long as 
any of these sensible attractions magnetize and chain us to physical enjoyment, so long are we "in 
worldly possessions" and precluded from attaining real Initiation into what is super-physical . This 
work of detachment and self-purification is our Entered Apprentice work, and to it, as you know, is 
theoretically allotted the long period of seven years. The reason for the seven years apprenticeship 



is based on the septenary principle operating in Nature . In the course of each seven years the 
material particles of the human body become entirely changed and reconstituted . By a course of 
pure living, diet, and thought for that period, therefore, the physical organism is clarified, 
sublimated and made a more efficient vehicle for the transmission of the central inner Light. This is 
the true reason for asceticism ; the gradual substitution of refined physical tissues for grosser, 
impure ones . 

Second, the analysis, discipline and obtaining control of one's inner world, -of the mind, of one's 
thoughts, one's intellectual and psychic faculties . This extremely difficult task is that of the 
Fellowcraft stage, to which is allotted a further five years, which with the previous seven make 
twelve . Because of this, the candidate who had duly completed this period was said, in the ancient 
systems, to be mystically "twelve years old, "-a point to which we will refer again presently. 

Third, the "last and greatest trial," lay in the breaking and surrender of the personal will, the dying 
down of all sense of personality and self-hood, so that the petty personal will may become merged 
in the divine Universal Will and the illusion of separate independent existence give way to 
conscious realization of unity with the one Life that permeates the Universe . For so only can one be 
raised from conditions of unreality, strife and figurative death to a knowledge of ultimate Reality, 
Peace and Life Immortal. To attain this is to attain Mastership, involving complete domination of 
the lower nature and the development in oneself of a higher order of life and faculty . And he who 
thus attained was said to be of the mystical age of thirty years, of which also I will say more 
presently. 

Now it is these three stages, these three labours or processes, that are epitomised dramatically in our 
three Degrees . Every Mason in taking those Degrees identifies himself ceremonially with what 
they signify ; he also solemnly obligates himself to put their significance into actual practice in his 
subsequent life. But it is obvious that those labours are highly arduous tasks demanding the whole 
time, the persistent thought, and the concentrated energies, of any one who submits himself to them 
. They are not achieved by merely passing through a sequence of ceremonies in three successive 
months, at the end of which the candidate, far from being an Initiate, usually remains the same 
bewildered, benighted man he was before, knowing only that he has been hurried through three 
formal rites entitling him at last to the august title of Master Mason. 

Hence we are justified in asserting that Masonry, as now unintelligently practised, does not and 
cannot confer real Initiation ; it merely discharges certain ceremonial formalities . Nevertheless in 
those formalities the earnest Mason, the diligent pursuer of the path of Light, is given a clear chart 
of the process of spiritual self-development which he can follow up by his own subsequent 
exertions ; and further, he is directed to a most valuable key for unlocking central truth and 
discovering the hidden secrets and mysteries of his own being, -the key of intense aspiration to find 
the Light of the centre. 

"Does that key hang or lie?" asks one of our lectures . For most Masons it lies . It lies rusting and 
unused, because they either do not desire or do not know how to use it, or have no one competent to 
show them how to do so. For some few it hangsyou are taught where-and, though it is of no manner 
of metal, those who have found and use it, pursuing their quest with fervency and zeal, if perhaps at 
first with shambling feet and uncertain steps, may assuredly hope to gain admission into the Lodge 
of their own soul, and, when the last hoodwink falls that now blinds their vision, to find themselves 
there face to face with the Master of that Lodge, and in possession of every point of fellowship with 
Him . 


A poet well schooled in the process of real Initiation has thus written of it: 



Pierce thy heart to find the key 


With thee take 

Only what none else would take 
Lose, that the lost thou mayst receive ; 

Die, for none other way cant live . 

When earth and heaven lay down their veil 
And that apocalypse turns thee pale, 

When thy seeing blindeth thee 
To what thy fellow-mortals see, 

When their sight to thee is sightless, 

Their living, death ; their light, most lightless ; 

Seek no more .... 

Francis Thompson's "Mistress of Vision ." 

For it is then, and only then, that true Initiation is achieved, that the lost Word is found at the deep 
centre of one's own .heart, and the genuine but withheld secrets of our immortal being are restored 
to us in exchange for the natural knowledge and faculties which, in this world of time and change, 
have been given us by Providence as their temporary and mortal substitutions . 

The Purpose of the Mysteries 

We shall understand little of the purpose of Masonry unless we know that of the older systems out 
of which it issued. That purpose was to promote and expedite the spiritual evolution of those who 
desired the regeneration of their nature and were prepared to submit to the necessary discipline. 
Thus the work of the Ancient Mysteries was something vastly more serious and momentous than 
merely passing candidates through a series of formal rites as we do to-day. Their great buildings, 
which still survive, were assuredly not erected at such immense labour and skill merely to provide 
convenient meeting-places, l ik e our modern Lodge premises, at which to administer a formal rite at 
the end of a day devoted to business and secular pursuits . The mass of Initiation literature and 
hieroglyphs available to us reveals how drastic and searching was the work to which candidates 
were subjected under the expert guidance of Masters who had previously undergone the same 
discipline and become competent to advance their juniors . With them the work was a difficult but 
exact science, claiming one's whole time and energies ; it was the highest, greatest and holiest of all 
forms of science-the science of the human soul and the art of its conversion from a natural to a 
regenerate supernatural state . Reminiscences of the dignity of this work still survive in our 
references to Masonry as the "noble science" and "royal art," terms meaningless to-day, although 
each newly made Mason is charged to make daily progress in Masonic science and every one 
installed into the chair of a Lodge is termed a Master of Arts and Sciences . 



But this secret immemorial science could be imparted only to those morally fit and spiritually ripe 
for it, as not all men yet are . It was meant only for those bent on passing from the moral and 
intellectual darkness in which normal humanity is plunged, to that Light which dwells in their 
darkness, though that darkness comprehendeth it not until it is opened up at their centre . It was 
solely for those who sought the way, the truth and the supernatural life, and were ready to divest 
themselves of the "money and metals" of temporal interests and concentrate their energies upon the 
evolution of the higher principles of their nature, which is possible only by the abnegation and 
surrender of their lower tendencies . 

Evolution, nowadays recognized as a universal process in Nature, is sometimes supposed to be a 
modern discovery. But the ancient Wisdom-teaching knew and acted upon it ages before modem 
scientists discovered it in our own day. It recognized that in all the Universe there is but one Life 
broken up and differentiated into innumerable forms, and evolving through those forms from less to 
greater degrees of perfection . In Masonic metaphor it saw Nature to be the vast general quarry and 
forest out of which individual lives have been hewn l ik e so much stones and timber, which when 
duly perfected are destined to be fitted together and built into a new and higher synthesis, a majestic 
Temple worthy of the Divine indwelling, and of which Solomon's temple was a type. All life has 
issued out of the "East," i.e., from the Great World of Infinite Spirit, and has journeyed to the 
"West" or the Little World of finite form and embodiment, whence, when duly perfected by 
experience in those restricted conditions, it is ordained to return to the "East ." Hence when our 
Entered Apprentice is asked in the lecture, whence he comes and whither he goes, he replies that he 
is on his way back from the temporal West to the eternal East . The answer corresponds with a 
fuller one to be found in the surviving records of the early British Initiates, the Welsh bards, where 
to the same question the following reply is made: 

"I came from the Great World, having my beginning in Spirit. I am now in the Little World (of form 
and body) where I have traversed the circle of strife and evolution, and now, at its termination, I am 
man . In my beginning I had but a bare capacity for life ; but I came through every form capable of 
a body and life to the state of man, where my condition was severe and grievous during the age of 
ages . I came through every form capable of life, in water, in earth, in air. And there happened to me 
every severity, every hardship, every . evil, every suffering. But purity and perfection cannot be- 
obtained without seeing and knowing everything, and this is not possible without suffering 
everything . And there can be no full and perfect Love that does not provide for its creatures the 
conditions, needful to lead to the experience that results in perfection Every one shall attain to the 
circle of perfection at last." 

—From "Barddas" ; the ancient initiate tradition of Welsh Druidic 

Life, then, was seen as broken up and distributed into innumerable individualized lives or souls and 
as passing from one bodily form to another in a perpetual progression . (In Masonic metaphor those 
individualized souls are called "stones," for stone or rock is an emblem of what is most enduring, 
and the stones are rough ashlars or perfect cubes accordingly as they exist in the rough or have been 
squared, worked upon, and polished) . The bodily form with which the soul becomes invested upon 
entering this world (symbolized by the Mason being invested with the apron) was seen to be 
transient, variable, perishable, of small moment compared with the life or soul animating it . Yet it 
was of the greatest importance in another way, since it provided a fulcrum point or point of 
resistance for the soul's education and development. It was, as we still term it, the "tomb of 
transformation" ; the grave into which the soul descended for the purpose of working out its own 
salvation, for transforming and improving itself, and ascending out of it the stronger and wiser for 
the experience . Thus life was seen as one continuous stream, temporarily checked by the particular 
form that clothed it, but flowing on from form to form to ever new and higher conditions ; 
slumbering in the mineral, dreaming in the plant, waking in the animal, and reaching moral self- 
consciousness in man. 



But does the ascending process end there ? Is man as he is now, the goal, the last word, of evolution 
? Surely, no. As a Persian Initiate once wrote : 


I died as a mineral and became a plant . 

I died as a plant and rose to animal . 

I died as an animal and became man . 

Why should I fear ? When did I ever grow less by dying ? 

Yet once more I shall die as, man, to soar 

With angels blest. But even from angelhood I must pass on. 

I shall become what no mind e'er conceived ! 

Now in order that evolution from lower to higher degrees of life may take place, some force must 
previously have been involved in living organisms that makes their evolution possible. You cannot 
have evolution without involution . A seed would never grow unless it held within it the force 
which expands it into a plant with a glory of leaf, flower and fruit. An acorn contains in itself the 
possibility of the oak. A bird's egg conceals within its fluids the miracle of the feathered bird and 
the skylark's song. Place any of these in appropriate conditions and the latent life-force will evolve 
naturally to its preordained limit. The growth may even be artificially accelerated by methods of 
intensive culture. 

What now of man ? Man also contains within him a life-force, a "vital and immortal principle" as 
Masonry calls it, which has not yet expanded to full development in him, and indeed in many men 
is scarcely active at all . Man, too, has that in him enabling him to evolve from the stage of the 
mortal animal to a being immortal, superhuman, godlike. Man is evolving towards a far-off divine 
event in common with all Nature . But how slowly ! and how greatly he thwarts and retards his own 
development by indulging his gross mortal body and its sensual tendencies, instead of repressing 
them and cultivating his latent higher principles ! Human nature, it is commonly said, continues 
always the same ; its weaknesses and vices are those of thousands of years ago, and looking back 
over the centuries there is little perceptible improvement in the mass despite our boasted progress 
and civilization . 

Can this long slow process of human evolution be expedited ? Is there a method of intensive culture 
that can be applied to man; one that will more quickly lift him clean above his present level and 
transform the sensual, benighted, human animal into an illuminated godlike being? 

To this the answer of the Ancient Mysteries was "Yes, there is. Human evolution can be accelerated 
; if not at present in the mass of humanity, yet in suitable individuals . Human nature is perfectible 
by an intensive process of purification and initiation. There is a royal science of spiritual 
advancement, and an art of living, by which the latent, undeveloped divine Life-principle in man 
can be liberated from the veils of darkness in him now obscuring it and brought forward into full 
play . If suitable candidates will but make the requisite sacrifices and submit to the necessary 
discipline, they can be brought in their present lifetime from darkness to Light ; they can be raised 
to a higher degree of humanity than is otherwise possible to them, and from that position they in 
turn will be able to raise others to the same degree and so gradually increase the spiritual stature and 
powers of the whole race ." 



The work of the Ancient Mysteries was, therefore, a "perfecting" work, or a work of initiation 
introducing men to a new order of life, since it was designed to make imperfect beings whole and 
perfect by completing their evolutionary possibilities . The Greek word for this (teleios) has the 
twofold meaning, "to make perfect" and "to initiate It occurs constantly in the Scriptures, the 
greatest text-book of Initiation- science that exists. They speak of "the just made perfect" ; "be ye 
perfect as your Father in heaven is perfect " ; "we speak wisdom (initiation science) to such as are 
perfect (or initiated)." And this perfecting work was for all men alike, of whatever race, language or 
religion, as Masonry is to-day . For all are brethren, and upon an equal footing in respect of this 
work, though not all men are necessarily ready to undertake it at the same moment ; all their 
religions are but so many radii of one circle, designed to lead them from the circumference and 
surface of life to the one Light at its centre. The qualifications of a candidate for the Mysteries were 
precisely those provided for Masonic candidates to-day. The one dominant wish of his heart in 
asking for admission had to be a yearning desire to pass from his natural blindness to the innermost 
Light, and to have his old imperfect nature revolutionized and transformed. Let me quote one of the 
oldest prayers in the world, still used in the East by those seeking real Initiation. In its original 
Sanskrit it consists of but six words, which may be Englished thus: 

From the unreal, lead me to the Real ! 

From darkness, lead me to Light ! 

From the mortal, bring me to Immortality 

It expresses the desire that should be not only upon the lips but burning in the heart of every 
candidate the world over, under whatever system of Initiation he may come. Without that desire as 
the deepest urge of his heart no real Initiation is possible, nor is any candidate properly prepared to 
ask for it . No one can expect to come to the revelation of the supernatural Light or to be raised to 
the sublime degree of a Master-soul, who is content with his present life as it is, who regards 
himself as not in darkness but as already enlightened, or supposes his present mortal existence to 
constitute real life . Only by perceiving the unreality and impermanency of the present world and its 
interests can one really begin to detach himself from it and divest himself, in thought and desire, of 
its "money and metals ." So long as one carries these with him or remains in any sense "in worldly 
possessions," so long he darkens his own light and automatically defers his own initiation into it . 
They mean not merely one's cash and temporal belongings . They include all that clogs and clings 
to us from our immersion in the outer world ; our intellectual possessions, our stores of notions, 
beliefs and preconceptions about truth, and the mental habits and self-will we have acquired, even 
with the best motives, in our state of darkness . All these constitute our "worldly possessions," and 
they are not our real wealth but our limitations . It is a paradox, but a true one, that we can only gain 
by giving them up . Their attraction must cease if that high Light we profess to seek is ever to be 
found, and the aspirant for it must stand at the door of the Mysteries in the deepest sense a poor 
candidate in a state of darkness, content to be as a child and surrender himself to an entirely new 
order and rule of life . Few are prepared for this task of self divestment of all that, as experienced 
men of the world, they have clung to and built into their mental fabric . How many of those who 
ceremonially profess to do so would be ready or content to do it really ? On being told of this pre- 
requisite to Initiation they would go away sorrowful, for they have great possessions, and are not 
yet prepared to give them up for something intangible. 

In a l ik e sense the candidate had to be a free man ; free in a moral rather than in a civil sense ; 
voluntarily offering himself for the work and free from all attachments hindering its achievement ; 
and so becoming also free to the goodly fellowship of all other initiates the world over and free 
from any less .worthy intercourse . He had to be of full age ; that is, in full bodily and mental 
maturity so as to be fit for the disciplines awaiting him, and spiritually mature (as not every one is) 



for undertaking the final stages of his evolution . Sound judgment, a sound mind in a sound body, 
was also essential in view of the demands made on the mental and psychic faculties, involving the 
risk of insanity to the mentally unstable. Strict morals (or chastity) were imperative, since the task 
of self-transformation involves physiological changes in the bodily organism necessitating the 
utmost personal purity and continence. 

And he had to be of good report . This does not mean of good reputation . It means that on being 
tested by the initiating authorities he must be found spiritually responsive to the ideals aimed at and 
"ring true," giving back a good sound or report like a coin that is tapped to determine its 
genuineness. In the wonderful Egyptian rituals in the Book of the Dead, one of the titles always 
found accorded to the Initiate was "true of voice." This is the same thing as our reference to 
possessing the "tongue of good report." It does not mean that he was incapable of falsity and 
hypocrisy, which goes without saying, but that his very voice revealed his inherent spirituality and 
his own speech reflected and was coloured by the divine Word behind it . The vocal and heart 
nervous centres"the guttural" and "the pectoral," as we say-are intimately related physiologically. 
Purity or impurity of heart modifies the tonal quality and moral power of one's speech . The voice 
of the real Initiate or saint is always marked by a charm, a music, an impressiveness, and a sincerity 
absent in other men ; for he is "true of voice" ; he possesses the "tongue of good report." 

The rule of the Ancient Mysteries was, and still is in other systems, that twelve years of preparation 
should elapse before the last great spiritual experience was permitted that brought the candidate to 
the Light at his centre and qualified him for Mastership, though less sufficed in appropriate cases. 

As the result of his purification and labours he had become an illuminate and he was mystically said 
to be twelve years old . From a rough ashlar he had become a polished perfect cube, a stone meet 
for building into the "holy city" which we are told lieth foursquare and has twelve gates that are 
always open. For all the parts of his organism were now equalised and balanced, and all his gates 
(or channels of intercourse with the divine world), no longer shut and clogged by the darkness of his 
former impurities, lay open for the passage through them of the true Light. In Masonry, this 
condition is called the "hour of high twelve" ; and he who has attained it will be, l ik e Hiram Abiff, 
in constant communion with, and adoration of, the Most High. 

Similarly, when the candidate had advanced still further to the sublime degree and powers of 
Mastership he was said to be thirty years old . You will find these mystical ages referred to in the 
third Gospel, where we are told (Luke ii, 42) of the Great Exemplar being twelve years old and so 
illuminated that His wisdom confounded the academic but unenlightened teachers of the Temple ; 
and again (Luke iii, 23) that He "began to be about thirty years old," at which period began his work 
as a Master, which continued for another three years and manifested such works and teaching as are 
possible only to a Master. Thirty-three years was, in the Mysteries, the mystical duration of life of 
every initiate who attained Mastership. 

That period has no relation to bodily age ; it is based on considerations we need not now enter into 
but referring to the completion of human evolution, when it can be said of the soul's travail "It is 
finished," "He hath wrought the purpose through of That which made him man." It is for this reason 
that the Antient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Masonry extends to 33 Degrees, in perpetuation of 
the original secret tradition. 

Of the detailed methods employed in assisting properly qualified candidates to the Light of the 
centre, whether in the ancient systems or at the present day, and of the wonderful change wrought 
by them in the candidate himself, nothing can be said publicly ; these are matters belonging to 
silence . The secrets and mysteries of real Initiation can never be fully communicated except in the 
course of the process itself. They are not disclosed in Masonry at all . Our teaching refers to them as 
being "serious, solemn and awful," but leaves them at that and provides various substituted ones 



which have no value save for ceremonial use, and as indications that more genuine ones exist which 
qualified Brethren will come to know when time and circumstances warrant. To all others they will 
remain sealed. That time and those circumstances depend upon our own desire and efforts . It is an 
ancient maxim of the science that "when the disciple is ready, the Master will be found waiting" to 
help on his advancement, and in accordance with this our teaching expressly declares that the 
purpose of the Mason is to seek a Master and from him to gain instruction. The earnest Masonic 
disciple whose heart and thought are steadfastly set towards the Light may assuredly count upon 
finding himself led sooner or later to a real Initiate capable of helping him to it and of revealing so 
much of the real secrets as he is qualified to know. 

Real Initiates exist at all times, in this country and elsewhere, for the science is not restricted to any 
nation or creed but is universally diffused over the earth's surface. They are, of course, not 
numerous and they are to be met with only by those competent to recognise them. They live a 
hidden life ; in the world but not of it. They never seek publicity or honours ; they never even 
disclose the fact that they are Initiates . This is the true Masonic secrecy and humility ; the greatest 
among men are content to be as those that are least. The world little suspects what it owes to its 
hidden Initiates. 

It would be interesting to say something of them, but time permits of my speaking only of a single 
case, and I will illustrate the universality of the science by referring (though reticently) to one who 
is not of our country, colour, or creed. 

There lives in a distant part of our Empire a man who is in the fullest sense a Master Mason . Years 
ago he embarked upon the great quest of Light, and after the necessary self-preparation under 
another Master he attained that great spiritual experience which changed his whole nature and 
raised him finally and permanently from darkness to Light. You may like to know how the daily life 
of such a man is spent, for it conforms literally with the rule of our symbolic working tool, the 24- 
inch gauge, in its application to the 24 hours of the day . Lor at least two hours each day he 
withdraws entirely from all external affairs, tyling his door as it were against their intrusion, and 
opens the Lodge of his soul to its central depths, passing into blissful, ecstatic communion with the 
Most High . It is his "hour of high twelve." Lor another two hours a day he sleeps ; that brief period, 
with a minimum of simple food, sufficing to rest and recuperate his bodily energies, since his real 
rest and sustenance are drawn from the supernatural peace and bread of life that come to him from 
his Centre. . The remaining twenty hours of the day are devoted to unflagging labour in the interests 
of his countrymen and in the spiritual advancement of those brought under his guidance . You may 
suppose that, he is recluse living an unpractical life in a cell or a forest. On the contrary, he is a 
prominent man who has been knighted for his public service, a King's Counsel, Attorney-General 
for a large province, a cultured scholar in English and other languages, and the writer of some 
important books. I have asked British Government officials who have worked with him for years 
whether they have found anything distinctive in him ; but they had detected nothing and were 
utterly blind to the extraordinary spiritual power and saintliness behind his formal exterior. He is 
one of those who has found, and lives from, the divine centre of his being -that point from Darkness 
which a Master Mason cannot err- and accordingly to possesses wisdom and powers beyond the 
imagination of the uninitiated world. 

THE IDEAL LODGE 

And now. Brethren, from what has been said of the ancient and royal science you may see how 
faithfully our Craft perpetuates the world-old system of elevating men to a higher order of life than 
they normally experience, and at the same time you may judge how far it falls short in 
understanding that science and carrying its intentions into practice. 



Are we always going to be content with making merely formal Masons and maintaining a merely 
social and philanthropic society? If so, we shall remain no different men from the popular world 
who are not Masons. Or are we wishful that the Craft should fulfill its purpose of being a system of 
real initiating efficiency by awaking the undeveloped spiritual potentialities of its members and 
raising them to a sublimer level of life? If so, we must educate ourselves more deeply in its 
meaning. Let me indicate how things would go if our work were conducted upon more intelligent 
lines . It is too much to expect any marked or sudden change to take place in old methods or habits, 
and resistance to any improvement may always be expected from some who are satisfied with 
things as they are . Nor can improvement be forced upon anyone ; to be advantageous it must come 
spontaneously . But many Brethren and many Lodges sincerely desire it, and so let me offer you a 
picture of what an ideal Lodge would be ; you may then consider how far it may be practicable to 
attempt to conform to that ideal. 

In the first place, Lodge meetings would be primarily devoted to what we are taught is their chief 
purpose, namely, to expatiating on the Mysteries of the Craft and educating Brethren in the 
understanding of them . This is now never done ; largely because we are without competent 
instructors. We suppose that our side-lectures are sufficient instruction. This is not the case . There 
are additional large fields of knowledge that Masons must explore if they wish to learn this science, 
while our official lectures are themselves packed with purposely obscured truths that are left to our 
own efforts and -perspicuity to discover, but the purport of which at present remains entirely 
concealed. 

The duly opened Lodge would be a sanctuary of silence and contemplation, broken only by 
ceremonial utterances or such words of competent and luminous instruction as the Master or Past 
Masters are moved to extend . And the higher the degree in which it is opened, the deeper and more 
solemn would be the sense of excluding all temporal thoughts and interests and of approaching 
more nearly that veiled central Light whose opening into activity in our hearts we profess to be our 
predominant wish . 

In such circumstances each Lodge meeting would become an occasion of profound spiritual 
experience . No member would wish to disturb the harmony of such a Lodge by talk or alien 
thought . No member would willingly be absent. If he were, save from necessity, it would indicate 
that, though entitled to wear the apron in a literal sense, he was temporarily not properly clothed in 
his mind and intention to be qualified to enter the Lodge. Every one would regret when such a 
meeting closed and it became necessary to be recalled from such peace and refreshment to the jars 
and labours of the outer world. 

The admission of a new candidate would be a comparatively infrequent event. For no one would be 
received to membership save after the fullest tests of his genuine desire for Masonic knowledge and 
of his adaptability to it . 

The conferment of the different degrees would be at much longer intervals than is now authorized, 
so as to ensure their being assimilated and understood, as is impossible at present . And upon the 
notable occasion of a degree being conferred, those present would be not merely passive spectators 
of the rite . They would have been educated to become active though silent helpers in it by adding 
the force of their united thought and desire to the spoken word, and so creating such a tense and 
highly charged atmosphere that an abiding permanent uplift in the candidate's consciousness might 
be hoped for . For the efficacy of rites l ik e ours does not depend solely on the Master who performs 
them. He is the mouthpiece for the time being of all those present, but it is the whole assembly that 
should really be acting ; forming, as it were, a battery of spiritual energy, and drawing the new 
Brother into vital fraternity with itself. Great power resides in strong collective thought and 
intention, and when these are focused and concentrated upon a candidate properly prepared in heart 



and mind for our ministrations, we might hope to induce in him something l ik e real initiation ; but 
otherwise he will be listening to but a formal recital of words . 


It follows that we should never hear such things as the usual talk about "making one's Lodge a 
success," or as personal praise to anyone for having performed his work creditably. Whether our 
work is really done well, in the sense of being spiritually effective, God alone knoweth, to whom all 
gratitude should be rendered for any good achieved ; while the only worthy success for a Lodge is 
its capacity for vitally affecting the lives of those who enter it and transforming their mental and 
moral outlook. 

The Lodge-room should be holy ground ; a Temple consecrated to Masonic work and used for it 
exclusively. For it is a symbol of the temple of the human individual, and we who are taught the 
necessity of every intending initiate's excluding money and metals from his thought, and who have 
before us the significant example of a Master who vigorously scourged all money-changers out of 
the Temple, should surely conform to those lessons by keeping our symbolic temple sanctified and 
entirely free from secular use . There is a practical advantage in so doing, for premises continually 
devoted to a single purpose become, as it were, charged and saturated with the thought and ideals 
thrown off by those who habitually so use it . A permanent spiritual atmosphere is created, the 
influence of which appreciably affects those who enter it, and the possibility of the efficacious 
initiation of candidates is thereby greatly increased ; whereas that atmosphere becomes defiled, and 
any spiritual influence stored in it neutralized, by promiscuous use. 

Visiting other Lodges would no longer be for social reasons, but, as in ancient times, solely with a 
desire to enlarge one's Masonic knowledge and experience, to share their spiritual privileges, or 
even to bring spiritual reinforcement to Lodges needing such help . No practice is more beneficial 
than intercourse between those of different Lodges engaged in a common work, and no right is 
more firmly established than that of any seeker of the Light to claim and be given hospitality and 
assistance conducing to that end. But our modern practice of mass-visiting is calculated to disturb 
the true work we ought to be doing, and is somewhat of an abuse and travesty of a privilege dating 
from antiquity, when occasional representatives of one school of the Mysteries journeyed, often 
long distances, to another in a different land to enlarge their own knowledge or impart it to those 
they visited. 

Promotion to office in, the Craft would not be by rotation or from seniority of membership or social 
standing in the outside world. It would depend entirely upon spiritual proficiency ; upon ability to 
impart real illumination to candidates and advance the true work of the Craft. The little jealousies 
and heartburning that now occur at the annual promotions would be impossible; such things belong 
to the base metals in our nature, which ought long ago to have been got rid of in any one really 
qualified for office. Did we better realize the serious nature of Initiation work, we should often 
shrink in humility tool from accepting positions we are now eager to seize . Remember that in 
leaving the outer world and . passing the portal of the Lodge into the world within, all values 
change; all questions, and even all sense, of personality should cease. You become engaged not in a 
personal task but in a common fraternal work before God, in whose sight all are equal and who will 
act through such instruments as seem good to Him . Therefore "let him that is greatest among you 
be as he that is least" ; it may well be that the apparently least among us is often likely to be the 
more efficient workman. 

These, I know, are lofty ideals, largely impracticable at the moment, and I have no wish to alienate 
any Brother's interest in the Craft by imposing a standard beyond his present capacity and desire. 
Yet Brethren to whom the ideal appeals, and to whom it is both desirable and practicable, might 
unite in meeting with the intention of conforming to it, and here and there even a small new Lodge 
might be formed for that special purpose, leaving other Lodges to work on their accustomed lines . 



Is Masonry, throughout, anything but a lofty ideal, which so far we have made little serious attempt 
to realize? The main difficulty before us is that the true work of the Craft contemplates a much 
greater detachment from the things and the ways of the outer world than we are at present willing, 
or perhaps able, to allow. So we compromise with ourselves, and seek to combine the outer secular 
life with the inner ideals of the Craft. The two conflict, and no man can efficiently serve two 
masters . We must choose whom we will serve. 

Still the ideal is before us, a glimmering light in a dark, distracted and dying world, and it rests with 
ourselves whether it remains a glimmer or whether we strive to fan it into a blaze of fact. For those 
who desire merely a social and sociable organization, garnished with a little picturesque ceremonial 
and providing opportunity for a little amusement and personal distinction. Masonry will never be 
more than the formality it long has been and still is for many, and they themselves will remain in 
darkness as to its meaning, its purpose, and its great possibilities . 

But for those who are not content with vanities and unrealities, who - desire not a formal husk but 
the living spirit, and are bent on plumbing its well guarded secrets and mysteries to their depth and 
living out its implications to the full. Masonry may well come-as for some it has come to be the 
chief blessing and experience of their lives ; it may yield them even the last secret of life itself . It 
may fulfill for them the ancient prayer of the Eastern Initiates we just now spoke of, by leading 
them from the unreal to the supreme Reality, from darkness to Light ineffable, from the things of 
time and mortality to things immortal. They may find it a ladder of truth and world-escape set up 
for them in the wilderness around them, and their Lodge a place of unfolding vision where, with the 
Hebrew patriarch, they will exclaim: "This is none other than a house of God and a gate of 
heaven!" 



THE MASONIC INITIATION 


Light on the Way 

CHAPTER II 


W. L. WILMSHURST 


" They went up with winding stairs into the middle chamber, 
and out of the middle into the third . " 

— 1 Kings vi, 8. 

"Does the road wind up-hill all the way ?" 

Yes, to the very end. 

"Will the day's journey take the whole long day ?" 

From morn to night, my friend! 

"But is therefor the night a resting-place ? 

A roof for when the slow dark hours begin ? 

May not the darkness hide it from my face ?" 

You cannot miss that Inn. 

--Christina Rossetti 

In the previous paper we have spoken of the transition from darkness to light made by those who 
seek to effect the reconstitution of their natural being and to develop it, by the science and methods 
of Initiation, to a higher and ultra-natural level. 

It has been made clear that that transition must necessarily be gradual, and that, though 
ceremonially dramatized in three Degrees which can be taken in successive months, to realize the 
implications of those Degrees in actual life-experience may be a life-time's work ; perhaps more 
than a * life-time's. The Apprentice who has entered himself to the business of rebuilding his own 
soul has much to learn and to do before he becomes even a competent Craftsman in it ; the 
Craftsman, in turn, has much to do and far to journey before he can hope for complete Mastership. 
The work of self-transmutation is a strenuous one, not suddenly or hurriedly to be performed, and 
one needing hours of refreshment and passivity as well as hours of active labour, to each of which 
he will find himself duly summoned at the proper time. There is much to be learned in regard to the 
secrets of his own nature and the principles of intellectual science, which only gradually, and as the 
result of patience and experience, can become revealed to his view . There is a superstructure to be 
raised, perfect in all its parts ; a work involving much more than is at first supposed. There are tests 
and ordeals of a searching character to be undergone on the way. 

A measure of Light, a first glimpse of the distant Promised Land, may come to the eager sight of the 
properly prepared candidate from the first moment of his entrance upon the work, but he must not 
suppose that he has yet fully captured it and made it permanently his own . It is something, 
however, to have felt that a veil has been suddenly withdrawn from his previously darkened sight 
and that he has become able to distinguish between his former benightedness and the goal lying 
before him. 


We will entitle this present section, therefore, "Light on the Way," and make it treat of a variety of 
matters calling for the aspirant's attention as he pursues the way that intervenes between his first 
glimpse of the Light and its ultimate realization ; and in a subsequent section we shall speak of 
Light in its fullness of attainment . We will supplement our previous explanation of Masonic 
doctrine by dealing with further symbols and passages in the rituals, with which every Mason is 
familiar formally and by the outward ear, but the significance of which too often passes unexplained 
and unobserved . 

The expositions in this Section are offered not Light only for the private reflection of - members of 
the on Craft, but with the suggestion that they may serve the as material for collective meditation by 
Brethren in open Lodge or at Lodges of Instruction . For those upon the path to real Initiation, 
meditation is essential. For meditation opens a window in the mind through which Light streams 
into the understanding from the higher, spiritual principle in ourselves ; which window is 
symbolized by the dormer-window in the emblematic Temple of Solomon, through which came 
light to those ascending the stairway that wound inwardly to the middle chamber leading to the 
central sanctuary where alone Light in its fullness was to be found. 

The practice of meditation, moreover, whether personal or collective, conduces to that quietness and 
control of the normally restless, wandering mind . which are indispensable for the apprehension of 
deep Truth. Ancient Lodges, _ we are told, were wont to meet on the highest hills and in the lowest 
valleys ; and in an old Instruction-lecture it is explained that those expressions are meant to be 
figurative and relate less to actual places than to the spiritual and mental condition of those 
assembled. To meet in the valley, implied being in a state of sheltered passiveness and tranquility, 
when the minds of the Brethren surrendered themselves to quiet collective thought on the subject of 
their work ; and thus, being "led beside still waters," they became, l ik e the limpid unruffled surface 
of a lake, a clear undistorting mirror for the reflection and apprehension of such rays of light and 
truth as might reach them from above . To meet on the high hills, on the other hand, implied the 
more active work of the Lodge and the performance of it upon the superphysical planes-the "hills" 
of the spirit ; for the real work of Initiation is only there accomplished, and is no longer a 
ceremonial formality. 

There are times for work and times for repose in the Craftsman's task-times of labour and 
refreshment and to perform that task efficiently both must be utilized. Modern Lodges, in the 
general imperfect conception of Masonry, follow merely the rush and hustle methods of the outside 
world, which, of course, inside the Lodge have no place and ought no longer to be emulated . They 
are busy enough on the active side, but they provide no opportunity for cultivating the equally 
necessary passive aspect of the work . It would be found eminently advantageous, therefore, if 
Lodges which desire to- realize true Masonry adopted the practice of collectively contemplating 
points of symbolism and teaching ; devoting certain meetings to this special purpose, and then, 
without more discussion than is necessary and helpful, quietly and earnestly concentrating attention 
upon the significance of some symbol or point of doctrine brought before them . 

For those seriously engaged in the ascent of the winding staircase, -the following expositions may 
perhaps serve as helpful rays of light from the dormer window. They are necessarily brief and 
merely elementary introductions to phases of the science which, as the aspirant proceeds, he will 
find inexhaustible and claiming not cursory notice but his constant deep attention. May they, 
however, be as a lamp to his feet and a light upon the spiral path to ledge his own middle chamber, 
and help to guide him to that final central sanctuary where the Light itself shines in fullness and 
waits to be found. 


"THE KNOWLEDGE OF YOURSELF' ’ 



It has already been shown that the structure and appointments of the Lodge are symbolic ; that the 
Lodge is a representation both of the Universe and of man himself as a Microcosm or the Universe 
in miniature ; that it is an image of his own complex constitution, his heavens and his earth (his 
spirituality and materiality) and all that therein is . 

By contemplating that image, therefore, the Mason learns to visualize himself ; he is given a first 
lesson in that self-knowledge in the full attainment of which is promised the understanding of all 
things. "Know thyself," we have said, was written over the portals of the ancient temples of 
Initiation, self-knowledge being the aim of their intention and the goal of their purpose. Masonry 
perpetuates this maxim by recommending self-knowledge as "the most interesting of all human 
studies." It is the tersest, wisest of instructions, yet little heeded nowadays, and it is incapable of 
fulfillment unless undertaken in accordance with the ancient science and with a concentration of 
one's whole energies upon the task . 

It involves the deepest introspection into oneself and perfect discrimination between what is real 
and permanent, and what is unreal and evanescent in ourselves . As aspirants to the Mysteries could 
not learn the secrets of the Temple without entering it, learning its lessons, undergoing its 
disciplines, and receiving its graduated initiations, so no one can attain self-knowledge save by 
entering into himself, distinguishing the false from the true, the unreal from the real, the base metal 
from the fine gold, sublimating the former into the latter, and ignoring what is negligible or 
superfluous . The very word Initiation primarily derives from the Latin in ire, to go within ; and 
thence, after learning the lessons of self-analysis, to make a new beginning (initium) by 
reconstructing one's knowledge of life and manner of living. The 43rd Psalm restates the same 
instruction : Intro ibo ad altare Dei, " I will go in to the divine altar ." Similarly, the Masonic 
Initiation contemplates a going within oneself, until one reaches the altar or centre, the Divine 
Principle or ultimate hidden basis of our being. To know the anatomy and physiology of the mortal 
body is not self-knowledge. The physical fabric of man is a perishing self, mere dust and shadow, 
projected from vitalizing forces within it, and without permanence or reality . 

To understand the nature and mechanism of the mind, emotions and desires, is useful and necessary, 
but is not self-knowledge, for they, too, are transient and, therefore, unreal aspects of the deeper real 
self. The personality we present to the world is not our real self. It is but a mask, a distorting veil, 
behind which the true self abides hiddenly and often unknown to our unreal surface self, unless and 
until it be brought forward into consciousness, displacing and overriding the notions and tendencies 
of the natural, but benighted, superficial self. Until then its "light shineth in darkness and the 
darkness comprehendeth it not ." To bring it forward out of its veils of darkness, to "comprehend" 
and establish it permanently in our awareness is, and has ever been, the purpose of all Initiation . 

But this cannot be achieved until the outer bodily and mental vestures have been purified and a 
voluntary dying or effacement of everything in us alien to, or conflicting with, the real self has been 
suffered ; all which is implied by the teaching of our three Degrees respectively. 

True self-knowledge is unobstructed conscious union of the human spirit with God and the 
realization of their identity . In that identic union the unreal, superficial selves have become 
obliterated . The sense of personality is lost, merged in the Impersonal and Universal. The little Ego 
is assumed into the great All, and knows as It knows . Man realizes his own inherent ultimate 
Divinity, and thenceforth lives and acts no longer as a separate individual, with an independent will, 
but in integration with the Divine Life and Will, whose instrument he becomes, whose purposes he 
thenceforth serves . This is "the great day of atonement," when the limited personal consciousness 
becomes identified or made at one with one's own divine, omniscient, vital and immortal Principle, 
which each must realize as the high priest of his personal temple and after many washings and 
purifyings against the contrary tendencies of his former unregenerate nature . This was the secret 



supreme attainment hinted at in the cryptic maxim "Know thyself !." Each of us may judge for 
himself whether he has yet reached it . 


To find our own Centre, our real self, involves, therefore, a turning inwards of our previously 
externalized faculties of sense and thought, and an introspective penetration of the outlying 
circumferential elements of our nature until the Centre" is found. This task is figured by our 
ceremonial perambulations and by the path of the winding staircase leading from the ante-rooms 
and forecourts of our nature to the Centre, up which the aspirant must ascend, asking, seeking, 
knocking, all the way ; being subjected from time to time to tests of his progress and receiving, 
without scruple or diffidence, such wages of good fortune or adversity as unseen Providences may 
know to be his due . 

The inmost sanctuary he will find closely guarded . Nothing unclean can enter or approach that holy 
place. Hence in the biblical description of the symbolic Temple one finds that, in the forecourt, 
stood the great laver of water for the cleansing of pollutions, and the altar of fire for the sacrificial 
burning up of one's impurities. The sword of the G., directed to those unqualified to enter the 
Lodge, is the Masonic way of inculcating that peril exists to those who are not properly prepared to 
approach the Centre or who would rush in where angels fear to tread ; it corresponds with the sword 
of the Cherubim in Genesis, which turned every way to keep the way to the Tree of Life from the 
approaches of the unfit. 

Mental as well as physical purity is indispensable to real Initiation, but is far more difficult of the 
two to acquire . Modern psychology discloses not only how fractional a part of our entire mentality 
functions above the threshold of our normal awareness, but also what knots and twists, what mental 
lumber, what latent horrors and accumulations of inner foulness, lie stored in the sub-consciousness 
of even those living ordinarily clean lives. They are the deposits of the mind's past activities ; 
forgotten often by the conscious mind itself, yet automatically registered upon our impalpable 
mind-stuff by the recording pencil (mentioned among the Third Degree working-tools) which at 
every moment of our lives posts up entries of our thoughts, words, and actions. Lor at the centre of 
ourselves is the all observant Eye; so that we ourselves constitute our own Judgment Book, wherein 
each of us unwittingly inscribes his own history and formulates his own destiny, and its pages we 
have each to read ourselves . 

With these mental deposits and consolidations those skilled in Initiation science are well familiar. 
The modern psychologist calls them "complexes ." In the old treatises on the subject they are 
termed foul ethers, congelations of impure mental matter . They are the "base metals" of Masonry. 
Each of us has been an artificer of those metals and worked them into all manners of grotesque 
designs in his mental nature, and hence the conferment upon the candidate, at a certain stage, of a 
name attributed to the first of such artificers and signifying him to be still incompletely purged of 
worldly possessions of this kind. These "base metals" require to be discharged from the system by a 
long process of corrective purifying thought and aspiration and to be transmuted into gold, or pure 
mind-stuff, before real Initiation is possible. No inward fog must intervene between the outer and 
innermost organs of consciousness when the time comes for these to be unified. The Light of Truth 
cannot penetrate a mind crammed with pernicious thought and with opinions to which it clings 
tenaciously . It must empty itself of all pre-acquired knowledge and prejudices, and then rise on the 
wings of its own genius into the realm of independent Thought and there learn Truth at first hand by 
directly beholding it. 

The incident of attaining Light and self-knowledge is dramatically emphasized in Masonic 
ceremonial . It is represented by that important moment in the ritual of the Third Degree when 
darkness suddenly gives way to bewildering light, in which light the candidate gazes back for the 
first" time upon the remains of his own past and beholds the emblems of his own mortality. He has 



now (at least in ceremony) surmounted the great transitional crisis involved in becoming raised 
from a natural to a higher order of humanity. He perceives his temporal organism to have been the 
"tomb of transformation," in which the great change has been wrought . He has risen from that 
tomb, and for him the old grave of the natural body has lost its sting, and that spiritual 
unconsciousness, which is termed "death," has been swallowed up in the victory won at last by his 
higher eternal principle over his lower temporal one. The mystical sprig of acacia has bloomed at 
the head of his grave, by the efflorescence of the Vital and Immortal Principle in his purified mind 
and neural system . 

Thus is portrayed for us, in Masonic ceremony, the moment of attainment of knowledge of one's 
true self. The incident, let it be emphasized, does not involve the physical death of the body and its 
faculties, for to "the companions of his former toils" the, purified mind will thereafter be reunited . 
But thenceforth they will be his docile, plastic, obedient servants, and no longer his master. He will 
continue to live in the world for the remainder of his appointed span, no longer for his own sake, 
but for the uplifting and advancement of his fellowmen to his own high degree. His expansion of 
consciousness and wisdom will become part of his equipment for practical work in the world. His 
own spiritual evolution is complete, so far as the educative experience of this world can take it ; he 
lives now to help on that of humanity. 

A great and good Brother, reviewing his long connection with Masonic sanctuaries more than a 
century ago, wrote thus about Initiation : 

"The only initiation which I preach and seek with all the ardour of my soul is that by which we may 
enter into the heart of God and make God's heart enter into us, there to form an indissoluble 
marriage which will make us the friend, brother and spouse of our Divine Redeemer." This 
attainment is the self-knowledge pointed to by the Craft teaching, and to which that teaching seeks 
to guide the reflections of every Masonic Initiation has no other end than this conscious union 
between the individual soul and the Universal Divine Spirit. 

Louis Claude de Saint Martin ; Theosophic Correspondence, with Baron Kirchberger ; a work of 
great value and disclosing the nature of Masonic work in French Lodges prior to the Revolution of 
1789 . 

This union is symbolized by the familiar conjunction of the square and the compasses. The square 
is the emblem of the soul ; the compasses of the Spirit which indwells in that soul. At first the 
Mason sees the points of the compasses concealed behind the square, and, as he progresses, their 
points emerge from that concealment until both become superimposed upon the square. Thus is 
indicated the progressive subordination of the soul and the corresponding coming forward of the 
ultimate Spirit into personal consciousness, so that the Mason can " work with both those points," 
thus becoming an efficient builder in the spirit and rendering the circle of his own being complete 
by attaining conscious alliance with his ultimate and only true self. 

THE "G" 

Centrally, in the ceiling of each Lodge, is exhibited this striking symbol. It is the emblem of the 
Divine Presence in the Lodge; it is also the emblem of that Presence at the spiritual centre of the 
individual Mason. Its correspondence in the Christian Church is the perpetual light burning before 
the high altar. 

In the First and Second Craft Degrees the symbol is visible in the heavens of Lodge. In the Third 
Degree it has become invisible, but its presence is still manifested, being reflected in the small light 
in the East which, in correspondence with the Divine Presence is as every Mason knows 



inextinguishable even in one's darkest moments . In the Royal Arch Degree it again becomes 
visible, but in another form and in another position-on the floor of the Temple and at its centre, and 
in the form of a cubical altar, a white stone, bearing the Sacred Name. In the course of the Degrees, 
therefore, it has come down from heaven to earth ; Spirit has descended to the plane of purified 
Matter; the Divine and the human have been brought together and made one. God has become Man 
; Man has been unified with God, and has found the Divine Name written upon the altar of his own 
heart . 

In the significance of this symbol and its transpositions during the four Degrees may, therefore, be 
discerned the whole purpose and end of Initiation, the union of the personal soul with its Divine 
Principle. Masonry has no other objective than this ; all other matters of interest connected with it 
are but details subsidiary to this supreme achievement. 

When the Lodge is opened, the mind and heart of every Brother composing it should be deemed as 
also being opened to the "G" and all that it implies, to the intent that those implications may 
eventually become realized facts of experience . When the Lodge is closed, the memory of the "G" 
symbol and its implications should be the chief one to be retained and pondered over in the 
repository of the heart. 

Further, great significance lies in the centrality of the "G." The Lodge is grouped around it, not 
assembled immediately below it . It is as though this Blazing Star or Glory in the centre burned with 
too fierce a light for anything less pure and bright than itself to withstand the descent of its direct 
rays ; and, accordingly, the floor of the Lodge is left open and unoccupied ; and only at its 
extremities do the assembled Brethren sit, removed from its direct rays . Directly beneath it lies the 
chequer- work floor ; the symbol of the manifested creation, where the one White Light from above 
becomes differentiated into perpetual duality and opposites of light and darkness, good and evil, 
positive and negative, male and female, as evidenced by the black and white squares, yet the whole 
held together in a unity as is denoted by the symbolic skirt-work around the same . 

The "G" therefore denotes the Universal Spirit of God, permeating and unifying all things . It is a 
substitute for the Hebrew letter Yod, the tenth letter of the Hebrew alphabet, and out of which all 
the other letters of that alphabet are constructed in correspondence with the truth that all created 
things are modifications of the one primal Spirit . In the Instruction-lecture of a Degree outside our 
present constitutions, the "G" is explained as having a three-fold reference ; (i) the Glory of God, or 
glory in the centre ; (2) Grandeur, or the greatness of perfection to which man may become raised 
by initiation into union .with God at his centre ; (3) Gom-El, a Hebrew word of praise for the 
Divine power and goodness in designing that perfection and that union between the Creator and the 
creature. There is also a Hebrew tradition that Gom-El was the word uttered by Adam on first 
beholding the beauty of Eve and perceiving the ultimate destiny of humanity. 

The "G" had its equivalent in the Egyptian Mysteries in the solar symbol of Ra, the spiritual Sun. In 
the great temple of the Greek Mysteries at Delphi, where the Eleusinian initiations took place for 
seventeen centuries, it was represented by the fifth letters of the Greek alphabet, the E (or Eta) ; five 
being a numerical symbol of man in the Pythagorean system, as evidenced by his five senses, the 
five-fold extension of his hands and feet, and in accordance with considerations of a more abstruse 
nature. Hence the five-pointed star (or pentagram) is also a symbol of man, and expresses a variety 
of truths concerning him . In the rituals in the Book of the Dead the candidate is described as a 
"keeper of five" ; Operative fellow-craft Masons worked in batches of five, and a Speculative 
fellow-craft Lodge to-day consists of five brethren ; all these allusions having a deeper significance 
than can be explained here, but bearing upon the present state of human evolutional development . 



Plutarch records that the "E" was regarded as a symbol of the greatest importance and 
instructiveness and was exhibited in three forms (corresponding with our three Degrees), first in 
wood, afterwards in bronze, and finally in gold. The progression signified a corresponding advance 
of the candidate's moral and spiritual nature under the discipline of Initiation. He is likened at first 
to soft, perishable wood; hardening into the durability of bronze. ; which impure, alloyed metal 
finally becomes sublimated into gold-the symbol of the attainment of purity, wisdom and perfection 
to which Initiation leads. 

Beyond this, however, the central symbol had another deep meaning. The great Initiation-temples of 
antiquity, as also certain Christian Churches of historic interest (such as those of Iona and 
Glastonbury, from which Britain became Christianised), were erected at certain focal points of the 
earth's surface known to the Initiates of the time as being magnetic centres or nodal points of 
spiritual force peculiarly favourable for the influx into this world of currents of Divine Power and 
for their irradiation thence to surrounding regions . Each such place was called an Omphalos, a 
navel, or mystical centre ; and the Temple at Delphi is related to have been built where it was under 
divine guidance and for that purpose; and we know that it became the centre of light and religion to 
the then civilized Western world for seventeen centuries. 

This historical fact and this occult principle are now reproduced in Masonry. Every Lodge, every 
place of Initiation, is in theory-though not nowadays in practice-held at a centre or physical focus 
point selected as being favourable both to the initiation of those who enter it and to the spiritual 
advancement of the uninitiated popular world resident in its vicinity. "A city set on a hill cannot be 
hid." , A Temple or Lodge of Brethren intelligently performing its work is not only engaged in a 
work of spiritual building as regards its own members; it is, though perhaps unconsciously, at the 
same time, generating and throwing off vibrations of spiritual energy to all around it ; its occult 
influence extends, and its radiations are of efficacy, to a greater range than one dreams of. 

If, then, the Lodge be a spiritual focus-point, the centre of the Lodge, where the "G" is exhibited, is' 
its most vital and sacred point ; the point at which Divine Energy may be thought of as concentrated 
and specially powerful . And the reason will become clear for placing the candidate at that point at a 
certain moment in the Ceremony . 

Why is he then placed in the centre ? Previously he has been placed, not there, but in certain more 
removed places in the Lodge ; in the N.E. or the S.E. corners where the intensity of the central Light 
is theoretically less powerful, where it is tempered and adjusted to his as yet unperfected organism, 
and where charges and instruction appropriate to his then state of advancement are imparted to him 
. But when directed to be placed in the Lodge-centre, he is called upon to stand, as it were, in direct 
alignment with the descending ray of the Supernal Light and to bear the stress of its full current . 

The intensity of that current can only be borne and withstood by one who is perfect in all his parts 
and in whom the sensual, emotional, and mental natures have been purified, rectified and brought 
into harmony and to an alignment corresponding with the physical and moral erectness of a just and 
upright man ; an unpurified man would run the peril of having his organism injured or shattered by 
a current of that fiery Power, by which every soul must sooner or later be tested, but which 
consumes everything not assimilable with itself. The three Hebrew "children" (i.e., initiates) who 
withstood unscathed the fiery furnace into which they were plunged, typify the truth here - testified 
to . 

When, therefore, a candidate is placed in the centre of the Lodge, beneath the "G" symbol, let those 
assembled around him try to realize the intention of what is thereby implied. Let them reflect that at 
that important moment, more perhaps than at any other in the ceremonies, it is possible for the 
celestial Light to descend upon the duly prepared candidate, to flood his heart and expand his mind, 
and so to open his understanding to the instruction then communicated to him that he may realize 



the spirit as well as hear the letter of it, whilst standing in that sacred position. And let them at that 
moment silently and earnestly invoke the Light of the centre, that it may then consciously arise in 
both him and them, so that what is done ceremonially may become for them both, a great fact of 
spiritual experience . 

The point is emphasized here with earnestness, because the Masonic procedure of placing the 
candidate in the centre of the Lodge at an important stage of his progress not only perpetuates a 
traditional and purposeful ancient practice, but also accords with what occurs in Initiations of a 
much more advanced and real character than it is possible to speak of here, as those who become 
duly qualified will one day come to find. By understanding and being faithful in the small things of 
even an elementary and ceremonial system, one becomes educated for and prepared to be entrusted 
with greater ones when the time for acquiring them arrives. 

THE LADDER 

A most important part of the curriculum of the Ancient Mysteries was instruction in Cosmology, 
the science of the Universe. The intention of that instruction was to disclose to candidates the 
physical and meta-physical constitution of the world and the place and destiny of man in it. They 
were shown how the complex human organism reproduces the great World and summarizes it in 
small, so that man may see himself to be a microcosm or miniature copy of it. They were 
enlightened not only upon the external visible aspect, but also upon the physically unseen and 
impalpable aspect, both of the Universe and themselves . They learned truths concerning the 
material and the ultramaterial sides of the world and were taught that corresponding features were 
present in themselves . They learned of the continual flux of matter, of the transiency of bodily 
forms, and of the abiding permanence of the one Life or Spirit which has descended and embodied 
itself in matter, and has there distributed and clothed itself in an endless but progressive variety of 
forms from the mineral up to the human, with the purpose of generating eventually a finished 
perfected product as the result of the mighty process . There was demonstrated to them the dual 
cosmic method of Involution and Evolution, by which the universally diffused Life-force involves 
and circumscribes itself within material 1 imitations and physical conditions, and thence evolves and 
arises out of them, enriched by the experience. They were taught of the different levels and 
graduations of the Universe-some of them material and some ethereal, -the planes and sub-planes of 
it, upon which the great scheme is being carried out ; which levels and planes, all progressively 
linked together, constitute as it were one vast ladder of many rounds, staves, or rungs ; a ladder 
which Tennyson once well described as 

The world's great altar-stairs 

Which slope through darkness up to God. 

Candidates in the old systems were instructed in these matters before being admitted to Initiation . 
The knowledge served to explain to them their own nature and constitution and their place in the 
World system. It demonstrated to them their own evolutionary possibilities and made clear to them 
why Initiation-science had been instituted, and how Initiation itself was an intensive means of 
accelerating the spiritual evolution of individuals who were ripe for it, and capable of intelligently 
co-operating with and expediting the cosmic process . With this knowledge they were then free 
either to proceed to actual Initiation and undertake its obligations, sacrifices and discipline, or to 
stand down and go no farther if they found themselves unwilling, or without the courage, to 
undertake the arduous task involved. Freedom of the personal will in this momentous choice was 
always essential to admission to Initiation, and the same absence of constraint still attaches to 
admission to modem Masonry . 



The modem Mason, however, is left entirely without any cosmo logic instruction and to such hazy 
notions on the subject as he may happen to hold . It becomes difficult, therefore, in regard to this 
and many other matters of Masonic moment, to speak of the disciplina arcani to those who may be 
either not interested in it or who would treat the information with incredulity as something about 
which nothing certain is known or perhaps knowable. Skepticism, freedom and independence of 
thought about matters of a more or less occult nature have their undoubted place and value in the 
outer ways of the world . But they are foreign to and inconsistent with the mental attitude 
appropriate to those who, on entering a hall of Initiation, are supposed to tyle the door to the outside 
world and its conceptions, and, divesting - themselves of all ideas there preacquired, to offer 
themselves as humble teachable pupils of a new and authoritative order of knowledge . Where every 
one claims to be already possessed of a sufficiently satisfactory explanation of the Universe and his 
place in it, or is content to get along without one, and in either case prefers his private judgment to 
any other that may be offered him, the soil for making Initiates in any real sense is distinctly 
unfavourable. For such, however, these pages are not written. They are offered only to the minority 
of Brethren eager to learn what Masonry has to teach them upon matters in which they earnestly 
seek knowledge and guidance. 

Masonry, then, in exhibiting to them a simple ladder offers them a symbol the significance of which 
is calculated to open widely the eyes of their imagination. It is true that in the Instruction lecture the 
ladder is expressly referred to that of Jacob in the familial - biblical episode, and that that ladder is 
then given a moral significance and made to suggest the way by which man may ascend from earth 
to heaven by climbing its symbolic rungs, and especially by utilizing its three chief ones 
representing the virtues Faith, Hope and Charity. This moral interpretation is warranted and salutary 
. But it is far from exhaustive, and conceals rather than reveals what "Jacob's ladder" was really 
intended to convey to the perspicuous when the compilers of our system gave it the prominence 
they did . We may be assured they had a much deeper purpose than merely reminding us of the 
Pauline triad of theological virtues . 

The ladder, then, covertly emphasizes the old cosmological teaching before referred to . It is a 
symbol of the Universe and of its succession of step-like planes reaching from the heights to the the 
depths. It is written elsewhere that the Father's House has many mansions ; many levels and resting 
places for His creatures in their different conditions and degrees of progress . It is these levels, these 
planes and sub-planes, that are denoted by the rungs and staves of the ladder . And of these there 
are, for us in our present state of evolutionary unfoldment, three principal ones ; the physical plane, 
the plane of desire and emotion, and the mental plane or that of the abstract intelligence which links 
up to the still higher plane of the spirit . These three levels of the world are reproduced in man. The 
first corresponds with his material physique, his sense-body ; the second with his desire and 
emotional nature, which is a mixed element resulting from the interaction of his physical senses and 
his ultra-physical mind ; the third with his mentality, which is still farther removed from his 
physical nature and forms the link between the latter and his spiritual being . 

The ladder, and its three principal staves, may be seen everywhere in Nature. It appears in the 
septenary scale of musical sound with its three dominants ; in the prismatic scale of light with its 
three primary colours; in our seven day scale of weekly time, in the septenary physiological changes 
of our bodily organism, and the similar periodicities known to physics and indeed to every branch 
of science . The perfect Lodge has seven members, including three principal Officers . The 
advancement of the Third Degree candidate to the East is by seven steps, the first three of which, it 
will be remembered, are given special significance. 

Thus the Universe and man himself are constructed ladder-wise, in an orderly organized sequence 
of steps . The one universal substance composing the differentiated parts of the Universe 
"descends" from a state of the utmost ethereality by successive steps of increasing densification 



until gross materialization is reached ; and thence "ascends" through a similarly ordered gradation 
of planes to its original place, but enriched by the experience gained by its activities during the 
process . 

It was this cosmic process which was the subject of the dream or vision of Jacob and which 
accounts for "Jacob's ladder" being given prominence in our symbolism. What was "dreamed" or 
beheld by him with supersensual vision, is equally perceptible to-day by any one whose inner eyes 
have been opened. Every real Initiate is one who has attained an expansion of consciousness and 
faculty enabling him to behold the ethereal worlds revealed to the Hebrew patriarch, as easily as the 
uninitiated man beholds the phenomenal world with his outer eyes . The Initiate is able to "see the 
angels of God ascending and descending"; that is, he can directly behold the great stairway of the 
Universe and watch the intricate but orderly mechanism of involution, differentiation, evolution, 
and re-synthesis, constituting the Life-process . He can witness the descent of human essences or 
souls through planes of increasing density and decreasing vibratory rate, gathering around them as 
they come veils of matter from each, until finally this lowest level of complete materialization is 
reached, where the great struggle for supremacy between the inner and the outer man, between the 
spirit and the flesh, between the real self and the unreal selves and veils built round it, has to be 
fought out on the chequer- work floor of our present existence, among the black and white opposites 
of good and evil, light and darkness, prosperity and adversity . And he can watch the upward return 
of those who conquer - in the strife and, attaining their regeneration and casting off or transmuting 
the "worldly possessions" acquired during their descent, ascend to their Source, pure and unpolluted 
from the stains of this imperfect world. But to no man comes such vision as this unless he too be a 
Jacob who flees from the clash and hurly of secular activities into the solitude of his own soul, and 
in that barren wilderness interrogates himself and struggles agonizingly to penetrate the mystery of 
his existence, to read its purpose, and tear out the last secret of his own being . So, perchance, he 
may fall asleep, his head at last quietly pillowed upon that hard stone, against which hitherto he has 
been blindly dashing it . And then by the surrender of his own will and mental activities, and in the 
silence and quietude of the senses, his own inmost great Light may break, and from that new found 
centre he will see and know and find the answer to all his needs. Lor, in the words of an ancient 
record of Initiation, "the sleep of the body becomes the awaking of the soul, and the closing of the 
eyes true vision, and silence becomes impregnated with God. This happened to me when I received 
the supreme authentic Word . I became God-inspired. I arrived at Truth . Wherefore I give from my 
soul and whole strength, blessing to the Lather." (Hermes, Poemandres, I. 30). 

Jacob's vision and ladder, therefore, exemplify the attainment of Initiation, the expansion of 
consciousness that comes when the Light of the centre is found, and the cosmic vision that then 
becomes possible . The same truth is taught in a little treatise, of great instructiveness to every 
Mason, written by the initiate philosopher Porphyry in the third century and entitled On the Cave of 
the Nymphs. It is an exposition of a passage in Homer's Odyssey, which he shows l ik ewise to be a 
veiled story of the soul's wanderings, of its crossing the rough seas of life and enduring the tempests 
and trials of this world, and finally perfecting itself and escaping into the haven of peace . The 
passage describes a certain dark cave, above which grew an olive-tree, and into which certain 
nymphs entered at one end and became busy in weaving purple garments for themselves; and it was 
not possible to leave the cave save by a gate at the other end and after having ceased to be satisfied 
with the pleasure of inhabiting that agreeable but benighted place and sought a way of escape. 
Porphyry thus explains the allegory : The dark cave is that of the body into which the soul (a 
"nymph" or spiritual being) enters and weaves around itself a garment of flesh and blood, and 
indulges in sense-gratification alien to its real nature. The nymph-soul has descended through the 
planes of the Cosmos until it has entered this cave by the "gate of man" (i.e ., by evolving to human 
status), and it can only leave it by passing out through the opposite gate, the "gate of the gods" (i.e., 
by becoming perfected and divinised) . This it cannot do save with the help . of oil from the olive 



planted at the top of the cavern ; the oil of Wisdom which shall initiate the soul and guide it to the 
way out to the higher worlds and the regions of the blessed. 


Porphyry's exposition continues thus : "In this cave, therefore, says Homer, all external worldly 
possessions must be deposited . Here, naked and as a suppliant, afflicted, in body, casting aside 
everything superfluous, and renouncing all sensual energies, one must sit at the foot of the olive and 
consult with Minerva (Wisdom) by what means we may effectually destroy that hostile rout of 

passions which lurk insidiously in the secret recesses of the soul It will not be a simple task to 

become liberated from this sensible life ; but he who dares to do this must transmute himself, so that 
being at length divested of the torn garments, by which his true self is concealed, he may recover 
the ruined empire of his soul 

The Mason who reads this parable will not fail to see in it the allusion to the preparation of 
candidates . for initiation, or to recognise that the cave and the olive-tree growing above it 
correspond precisely with the grave of Hiram Abiff and the sprig of acacia planted at its head. Both 
of these allude, of course, to the human body in which the true spiritual self of man lies buried and 
imprisoned, and from the bondage of which it can only be freed by cultivating and lighting the oil 
of wisdom (or, alternatively, of causing the sprig of acacia to blossom) which will enlarge his 
consciousness and reveal to him his path, through the Universe . 

We have each descended into this world by the steps of Jacob's ladder ; we have each to ascend 
from it by the same steps . In some Masonic diagrams and tracing boards, upon the ladder is 
exhibited a small cross in a tilted, unstable position as if ascending it . That cross represents all who 
are engaged in mounting the ladder to the heights, and who 

Rise by stepping-stones 

From their dead selves to higher things. 

Each carries his cross, his own cruciform body, as he ascends; the material vesture whose 
tendencies are ever at cross-purposes with the desire of his spirit and militate against the 
ascent. Thus weighted, each must climb, and climb alone; yet reaching out-as the secret tradition 
teaches and the arms of the tilted cross signify-one hand to invisible helpers above, and the other to 
assist the ascent of feebler brethren below. For as the sides acid separate rungs of the ladder 
constitute a unity, so all life and all lives are fundamentally one, and none lives to himself alone. 

Indeed Life, and the ladder it climbs, are one and indissociable. The summit of both reaches to and 
disappears out of ken into the heavens ; the base of both rests upon the earth; but these two 
terminals that of spirit and that of matter-are but opposite poles of a single reality which cannot be 
known as a unity or otherwise than in its differentiated aspects of many planes, many mansions, 
many rounds or staves, except by him who has unified them in himself and become able to ascend 
and descend upon the ladder at will. But this is the privilege only of the Initiate skilled in that 
science of life which teaches how to mount the Scala Perfectionis, as a famous classical work of the 
isth century terms the ladder of initiation, known to Masons under the glyph of "Jacob's Ladder." 

THE SUPERSTRUCTURE 

The novitiate Mason is taught to regard his normal, natural personality as but a foundation-stone 
upon which he is recommended to erect a superstructure, perfect in all its parts and honourable to 
the builder. 



To how many does this instruction mean anything more than a general pious counsel to become 
merely a man of strong moral character and virtue ? It is something, of course, to fulfill that 
elementary standard, which needs, however, no membership of a Secret Order for its 
accomplishment ; but the recommendation implies a very different meaning from that, as a little 
reflection will show . It is not a recommendation merely to improve the condition of the already 
existing foundation-stone (the personality), but to erect upon that foundation something which 
which previously did not exist, something which will transcend and outrange it, although built upon 
it. For the reader who is unversed in the deeper side of Masonic significance, and is unaware of the 
hidden nature of it as thoroughly known to the original exponents of the science, the subject may 
prove difficult . It must therefore be explained at the outset that the superstructure to be erected is 
the organization of an ethereal or spiritual body in which the skilled Mason can function in 
independence of his physical body and natural personality . 

The theory of Masonry presupposes that man is a fallen creature ; that his natural personality is a 
transient and unreal expression of his true self as conceived in the Divine Mind; and that, under 
appropriate tuition and self-discipline, he may become rebuilt and reorganized into the original 
condition from which he has fallen. The present natural personality, however, is the basis or 
foundation- stone out of which that reorganization 'can proceed, and within it already exists, though 
in a condition of chaos and disorder, all the material requisite to the purpose. 

Building a superstructure upon one's present self involves much more than merely improving one's 
moral character. It is not a novice's task, although the advice to perform it is rightly given in the 
Apprentice- stage . It is a work of occult science, only to be undertaken by those educated and 
skilled in that science . It is the science to which 'the Christian Master referred in the words : 
"Which of you, intending to build a tower, sitteth not down first and counteth the cost, whether he 
have sufficient to finish it ? Lest, after he hath laid the foundation and is not able to finish it, all that 
behold begin to mock, saying, 'This man began to build but was not able to finish!"' Accordingly 
the Mason desirous of building a tower or superstructure should "sit down first and count the cost" 
by acquiring a thorough understanding of what is involved ; and before he is able even to begin the 
erection of such a building, he will find a good deal of rough labourer's work has first to be done 
upon himself in clearing the ground for the intended structure. 

There is an old Masonic Degree, not comprised in our present Constitutions, devoted specially too 
this subject . It is called the Degree of Grand Architect, and throws great light on the intention of 
those who, well understanding the secret science, made reference in our Ritual to the building of a 
superstructure . 

In that Degree the reference is to "building structures in the air," and it is taught that this is the: 
work only of grand architects, "being too great fog inferior craftsmen, who only know by admiring 
theme at a distance when done ." 

"Structures in the air !" All structures, save subterranean ones, rise into the air, -the average reader 
will say ; yet not buildings of brick or stone are here meant. Again, building castles in the air is a 
familiar term for indulgence in day-dreaming and fanciful speculation ; but, whilst all thought 
energy is constructive and creates objective form upon the plane of mind, we may be assured that 
the sages who perpetuated Masonic science were innocent of recommending the practice of 
anything so futile and unpractical. The airy structure to which they allude is the formation of a 
super-physical ethereal body, a "body of mist" as Hesiod and other Greek classics describe it, in 
which the adept Mason may consciously function in the finer planes of life and apart from his gross 
physical organism, and in which he will continue to live when the latter has become permanently 
discarded . It is spoken of by Origen, the Christian Father of the second century, as follows : 
"Another body, a spiritual and ethereal one, is promised us ; a body not subject to physical touch. 



nor seen by physical eyes, nor burdened with weight, and which shall be metamorphosed according 
to the different regions in which it shall be . In that spiritual body the whole of it will be an eye, the 
whole of it an ear, the whole serve as hands, the whole as feet" ; implying that all the now 
distributed faculties will be unified in that body into one, as was the case with man before the fall 
and descent into matter and multiplicity . 

Let us justify these observations by some pertinent references to the subject in the great text-book of 
Initiation-Science, the Volume of the Sacred Law ; though they might be abundantly supplemented 
from other sources. Like the famous Orphic Hymns of the Pythagorean and Eleusinian Schools of 
the Mysteries, the Psalms of our Bible are an anthology of hymns of the Hebrew Initiates and are 
full of Masonic allusion and instructiveness . In the 48th Psalm, the disciple of spiritual science is 
directed to take a walk round the symbolic City of Jerusalem ; he was told to mark well its 
bulwarks, to observe its palaces, and particularly to pay attention to the great tower of the Temple, 
which, l ik e a modern cathedral spire, rose into the air above all other buildings, so that he might not 
only himself appreciate the symbolism of what he saw, but might be in a position to interpret its 
significance to "them that come after" ; that is, to junior students of the science. 

He thus received a striking object-lesson in the analogy of material buildings to spiritual ones . In 
the massive defensive walls of the city he was to recognize the strength, permanence and resisting 
power of the spiritual organism or "holy city" which he must build for himself in exchange for, but 
upon the foundation of, the frail perishable temporal body. In the palaces of the mighty, with their 
gorgeous interiors and stores of costly furnishings and precious objects of art, he was to perceive 
that his own interior must become correspondingly beautified and enriched with spiritual treasures . 
But in the great heaven-pointing tower, to which his attention was specially directed, he was to see 
the symbol of a structure as far transcending his present temporal organism as the Temple-spire 
outranged the adjacent buildings at its feet . From this he was to deduce the necessity of building 
and projecting upwards from his lower organization, a "tower," a superior spiritual body, rising into 
and capable of functioning in the "air" or more tenuous and ethereal worlds than this physical one . 
This is the "structure in the air" which only "Grand Architects" are competent to raise ; this is the 
"superstructure" which our Entered Apprentices are enjoined to aspire to building . 

Let us turn next to the further pertinent information on the subject given by the Apostle-Initiate to 
his Corinthian pupils . He instructs them on this subject of superstructures . How is it possible to 
rear them ? "How are the dead raised up, and with what body do they come ?" (He is not speaking 
of the physically defunct, but of that condition of atrophied spiritual consciousness characterizing 
the normal animal man, which is always described as a state of "death" in the biblical and other 
writings on the subject) . He proceeds to explain that the physical body itself cannot be raised, since 
corruption cannot inherit incorruption, but that nevertheless there can be a "resurrection from the 
dead" through a sublimation of its vital essences, which can be reorganized and reconstituted into a 
new body of subtle matter on a supra-physical level . First comes the natural body we all wear to - 
begin with ; but out of it can be evolved a psychical body. The former is an entirely earthy vesture 
exhibiting an illusory unreal self to the world ; the latter is the body of our true spiritual self (or 
"lord from heaven") which hitherto has remained masked and buried within that temporal vesture ; 
"sown" in it as a seed, but capable of bursting its sheath and being raised from its former impotence 
to "power" (activity and conscious function). He properly speaks of it as one of the secrets and 
mysteries of Initiation, and his familiar words may thus be paraphrased : "I am expounding to you a 
mystery, one of the arcana of Initiation. We are not designed to remain always asleep in this 
drugged, deadened state of consciousness in which we are plunged, where we suffer the illusion that 
we are really alive, but are not . In the course of our evolution the due time comes for each of us to 
awake out of that sleep, and to become changed, transmuted ; for our consciousness to be 
transposed to a higher level. We have borne the earthly human image ; we have now to exchange it 
for an ethereal one of finer texture and purer quality . The change, the transposition of 



consciousness from the old to the new centre, comes suddenly (though it may take long to prepare 
and purify ourselves for its coming). When it occurs it comes with an inwardly heard crash, l ik e a 
trumpet-blast, as the nervous system and brain- structures react to the stress upon them involved in 
the transition ." ( It must be explained that the "trumpet" and "last trumpet" are technical terms 
among Initiates for the spiral, trumpet-shaped, whorls or vortices occurring in subtle matter under 
stresses, audible to those in whom the change occurs . The reference to the "sound of the last 
trumpet" stands for a physiological experience as the last fine physical strands of the old nature are, 
as it were, snapped and the nervous system re-electrified . In the East this experience is called the 
"end of the world," since for the Initiate it means the termination of his old worldly consciousness 
and its replacement by one of a much more vivid and intense quality .) 

The Apostle further explains that for this newly evolved Ego or conscious centre there is an 
appropriate body, for there are celestial as well as terrestrial bodies. There cannot be consciousness 
apart from a formal vehicle for it, and as the old earthy body has served (and will so continue to 
serve) for ordinary mundane purposes, so will the newly -evolved consciousness possess its own 
separate appropriate psychic or spiritual body for function upon supraphysical levels . The Initiate 
of this high degree, therefore, will possess a twofold organization ; his ordinary physical one (the 
"companion of his former toils") and his supra-physical one, and will be able to utilize and function 
in each . He will have built The his "tower" ; his "superstructure in the air ." 

The superstructure must be perfect in all its structure parts and so be honourable to the builder. 

What are its parts? 

Man, even in his natural, unregenerate, imperfectly evolved state, is a highly composite creature . 
Blended with his purely physical frame are three other supra-physical, but quasi-physical, bodies ; 
his etheric body (the "double" or wraith), his emotional or desire body, and his mental organization 
or body ; whilst over and beyond these, and not necessarily, in functional alignment with them, 
exists his ultimate spiritual self which distinguishes him from the sub-human creatures . These are 
his "parts," and they are but too often extremely ill-organized, uncoordinated and unbalanced . If 
they be imperfectly organized in the lower natural man, how can they be expected to be able to 
contribute requisite sublimations of themselves for the up-building of a body upon a higher level ? 
All bodily and mental disease and infirmity originates in disorder in these inner bodies, which 
disorder thereupon becomes reflected forwards and manifested in the physical husk. Unless the 
inner natures be disciplined and organized before the gross mortal vesture is shed at physical death, 
how can one enter the ethereal kingdoms otherwise than "maimed," without a "wedding-garment," 
and in a distorted shape, not perfect in all its parts, and anything but honourable to the builder ? 

But, as we have long since seen, the first duty of every spiritual Craftsman is the purification and 
discipline of these bodies, and the elimination from himself of all base metals therein of which he 
has himself been an artificer. Only in proportion to the achievement of this arduous task can he 
hope to bring these "parts" into order, into subjection to his will, and into coordinated function and 
alignment, and so in the fullest sense stand erect, a just and upright man and Mason. He need not 
trouble to know how his superstructure will develop or to what extent or measure of perfection he 
may have built it. For it will become automatically built in his heights proportionately as he 
schools himself in his depths and tests his work by the continual application to it of the cross (which 
is the square, level and plumb-rule in combination). When the time comes for his consciousness to 
be raised to that superior level and he hears the call "Friend, come up higher!" he will find the 
superstructure he has been building in the darkness below, perfect in all its parts and honourable to 
himself. He will have climbed a section of the life-ladder; he will himself have built, dedicated and 
consecrated King Solomon's Temple; and, through the result of his own labour upon himself, that 
resplendent body will appear to him more like the work of the Great Architect of the Universe than 
that of human hands . 



There are, however, farther sections of the infinite ladder to be climbed, even when this high level 
has been won. From thence there remains still further building to be done, a body to be fabricated 
manifesting still loftier wisdom, strength and beauty . For was not the first symbolic Temple to be 
destroyed and become replaced by a second, of which it is written that "the glory of the former 
house is not to be compared with that of the latter ?" 

But this still loftier work need not now be treated of. Let it suffice if what has already been said 
assists any reader to the building of his first superstructural Temple. 

THE CABLE-TOW 

These expositions are being offered in their present order with a purpose. That purpose is to outline, 
as nearly and systematically as may be, the due sequence and progressive stages of the work of 
spiritual Craftsmanship or self-building. We have traced that work from its inception in the heart's 
desire to pass from darkness to light and attain a higher order of life and mode of being, through its 
stages of the outer and inward purification essential to that attainment, and through the crisis of a 
deeper gloom, a voluntary abnegation of and dying to all the attributes that go to constitute the 
natural personality, until the aspirant who endures all these to the end is finally rewarded by 
receiving his "crown of life," as the biblical metaphor very fittingly terms that exalted order of 
conscious being which marks the fulfillment of human spiritual evolution. And we have shown 
how, in winning that high degree of consciousness, he has simultaneously built for himself out of 
the sublimations of his original nature a new superstructural body appropriate to it and in which it 
can function. In the abounding wealth of the symbols and veiled verbal references in our rituals and 
instruction lectures to the details of this truly scientific work, there remain, however, many others 
needing explanation, some of which can now be considered more advantageously than at our earlier 
stage and with better chance of being understood . 

One of these is the cable-tow. In my previous book it was explained that its use in the E .A. Degree 
taught the beginner the useful lesson that he who has once felt within him the impulses of the 
central Light and been moved to seek it should never recede from his quest and, indeed, cannot do 
so without doing violence to the highest within him, a violence equivalent to moral suicide . At the 
same time, he is also enjoined not to be unduly precipitate, not ignorantly and rashly to rush 
forward in an unprepared inward state to grasp the secrets of his own being, in which case peril of 
another kind threatens him; but to proceed humbly, meekly, cautiously and under instructed 
guidance . The ancient maxim "Know thyself," was coupled with another, Ne quid nimis, "Nothing 
in excess" ; for the science can only be learned and applied gradually . It will unfold itself more and 
more as it is diligently studied and pursued. 

The foregoing explanation of the cable-tow is but a very partial one, and inculcates a salutary, but 
purely moral, piece of advice . The deeper significance is a psycho-physiological one, and has to do 
with the mysteries of the human organism . It should not be overlooked that the cable-tow is given 
prominence not only in the First Degree . ' It is again mentioned in the obligation in the Third 
Degree, whilst it appears under another guise in that working-tool of the Master-Mason which acts 
upon a centre-pin . And finally it reappears in the Royal Arch Degree as a cord or life-line. It is 
requisite to understand what is involved in something to which such recurring prominence is given 


Let us first recall what has been already stated about the human organism being a composite 
structure of several natures or bodies (physical, etheric, emotional, and mental), fixated in a unity or 
synthesis ; each of such bodies being constituted of gross or subtle matter, of differing density and 
vibratory rate, and the whole coordinated by the central divine Principle (which may or may not yet 



have come forward into the formal conscious mind, although there are few in whose awareness it is 
not lurkingly present and more or less active as "conscience.") 

Thus the human constitution may be l ik ened to a number of glass tumblers placed one within the 
other and with, say, a night-light (representing the central Principle) inserted in the inmost one . The 
glass of the tumblers may be imagined as of progressive thickness and coarseness, from within 
outwards, and some of them as coloured, dirty, or not closely fitting in with the others . The coarser, 
dirtier, and more opaque the glasses, the less able will be the central light to shine through them ; a 
single glass may be so opaque as to prevent the passage of the light through all the rest. Here, then, 
is an object lesson in the need for the inward purification of our various constituent sheaths, and for 
becoming "perfect in all our parts ." As William Blake said very truly : "If the gates of human 
perception were thoroughly cleansed, we should perceive everything as it is-infinite ; but man has 
closed himself up till he sees all things only through the narrow chinks of his own cavern ." 

Another illustration . Human compositeness may be compared with the concentric skins or sheaths 
of a vegetable bulb (an onion, or hyacinth) . Here the sheaths are all equally pure and coordinated ; 
and because the bulb is perfect in all its parts or sheaths, and, when planted, fulfils the whole law of 
its nature, its life-force bursts its natural bonds, throws up a self-built superstructure into the air, and 
there effloresces into the bloom which is its "crown of life" or fullness of development. Man should 
do this, and, as we have shown, this is what .the Mason is taught to do . But man having (what the 
bulb has not), freedom of will to fulfill or to violate. the law of his nature, has chosen the latter 
course, and consequently by indulgence in perverse desire and wrongly directed thought, has fouled 
and disorganized his sheaths . Hence his spiritual darkness and his liability to all forms of disease . 
The central Principle cannot shine through his opacity, lighting up his mind and governing his 
desires and actions . It remains imprisoned within him. , He sees, thinks and knows only from his 
self-darkened outer sheaths, and is misguided and illuded accordingly. 

For a final example, let us turn to - the instructive familiar episode in the Gospels of the storm 
overtaking a boat containing a number of men, of whom the Chief was "asleep in the hinder part of 
the boat." The boat typifies the human organism ; its occupants, its various parts and faculties, 
including the as yet unawakened Master- Principle resident in its depths or "hinder part." An 
emotional upheaval occurs ; the rough waves of passion threaten to wreck the whole party . A brain- 
storm arises ; intemperate gusts of fright, wrong headedness, and mental un-control, make the 
position still worse. The extremity is sufficiently acute to awaken the Master-Principle into activity 
whose beneficent power is able instantly to still those unruly winds, and waves, which suddenly are 
reduced to a great peace. 

Every Master-Mason, who is a real and not merely a titular one, is able to perform this "miracle" in 
himself ; perhaps in others also. There is nothing super- natural about it to him. It is possible to him 
because he "has the Mason Word and second sight" ; he both understands the composite structure of 
the human organism, can visually discern the disordered part or parts, and can apply healing, 
harmonizing, vibratory power from his own corresponding part to the seat of mischief, saying to 
this disordered mental part or that unruly emotional sheath, "Peace, be still !" Every Master-Mason 
is therefore also a Master-Physician, able to benefit patients in a medical sense, and also to visualize 
the inner condition of those who look to him for instruction and initiation in a Masonic sense, to 
advise upon their interior needs and moral ailments, and help them to purify and align their 
disordered natures . But this is not possible save to one who himself has become pure and rectified 
in all his parts; the physician must first heal himself before he can communicate either physical or 
moral health to others . 


This promise about the compositeness of the human structure and the existence in us of a series of 
independent, yet coordinated "parts" or sheaths, has been necessary before we can speak directly of 



the cable-tow. What is it that connects these parts ? And are these parts dissociable from one 
another? 


We know that they are normally in close association and to this association applies the enjoinder 
that what God hath joined, man shall not put asunder. What the age-long process of evolution has 
built up with infinite patience and care is not to be tampered with for improper purposes, or even by 
well meaning but, as yet, unenlightened experiment in the supposed interests of science ; a point 
upon which the old Masters and teachers of our science are specially insistent, for reasons which 
now need not be entered upon . 

Nevertheless, a measure of dissociation does occur naturally in even the most healthy and well 
organised people (and of cases of abnormal psychic looseness of constitution we need not speak) . It 
occurs in sleep, when the consciousness may be vividly active, whether in an orderly or disorderly 
manner; people "travel" in their sleep . It occurs at times of illness or violent shock . It may be 
induced by alcohol or drugs ; the "anesthetic revelation" is a well recognized phenomenon. Under 
any of these conditions there may be a complete ec-stasis, or conscious standing out or away of the 
Ego from the physical body . Apparitions and even action at a distance are well accredited facts . 
Such phenomena are explicable only upon the suppositions of the existence of a subtler vehicle than 
- the gross body, of the fact that consciousness becomes temporarily transferred from the latter to 
the former, and that the two are capable of conjoint function in complete independence of the 
physical brain and body. 

What preserves the connection between the two "parts" thus disjoined, and makes possible their 
subsequent re-coalescence, is the "cable-tow." It is a connective thread of matter of extreme 
tenuousness and elasticity issuing from the physical abdominal region and maintaining the same 
kind of connection with the extended subtle body as the string with which a boy flies a kite. As the 
boy can pull in the kite by the string, so does the extruded subtle body become drawn back to its 
physical base . Were the kite-string severed during the kite's flight, the kite would collapse or be 
blown away. Similarly, were the human "cable-tow" permanently severed, death would ensue and 
each of the severed parts go to its own place. 

Biblically this human "cable-tow" is called the "silver cord" in the well known passage, "or ever the 
silver cord is loosed and the golden bowl is broken ; then shall the body return to the earth and the 
spirit to God who gave it ." "Silver" is the technical esoteric term for psychical substance, as gold is 
for spiritual, and iron or brass for physical . Its physiological correspondence is the umbilical cord 
connecting the child with its mother. Its analogue in ecclesiastical vestments is the girdle worn by 
the high-priests of the Hebrew and by the priests and monastics of the Christian Church . 

Everyone unconsciously possesses the cable-tow, and it comes into use during sleep, when a less or 
greater measure of involuntary dissociation of our parts occurs . A Master, however, is one who has 
outgrown the incapacities to which the undeveloped average man is subject. Unlike the latter, he is 
in full knowledge and control of all his parts ; whether his physical body be awake or wrapped in 
sleep, he maintains unbroken consciousness . He is able at will to shut off consciousness of 
temporal affairs and apply it to supra-physical ones . He can thus function at a distance from his 
physical body, whether upon the mundane or upon, higher planes of the cosmic ladder. His cable- 
tow, of infinite expansiveness, unwinds from his centre-pin and, stretching like the kite-string, 
enables him to travel where he will in his subtle body and to rejoin and reanimate his physical one 
at will . Hence it is that the Master- Mason is pledged to answer and obey all signs and summonses 
from any Master-Mason's lodge if within the reach of his cable-tow ; and such assemblies, it should 
be remembered, are contemplated therefore as taking place not at any physical location, but upon an 
ethereal plane. For corroboration of what is possible in this respect to a Master, one should reflect 
upon the instances of -bi-location, passing through closed walls, and manifesting at a distance, 



recorded of the Great Exemplar in the Gospels . These are representative of what is feasible to 
anyone attaining Mastership . 


The cable-tow, therefore, is given prominence to the reflective Craftsman as a help towards 
understanding his own constitution, and to foreshadow to him work that lies before him when is he 
fitted to undertake it ;-work which now may seem to him impossible and incredible. For as the 
skirret (which is the cable-tow in another form) is intended for the skilful architect to draw forth a 
line to mark out the ground for the intended structure, so the competent builder of the spiritual body 
will unwind his own "silver cord" when he learns how to function consciously on the ascending 
ladder of supraphysical planes, and to perceive the nature of the superstructure he himself is 
intended to construct . 

Further importance attaches to the significance of the cable-tow from the fact testified to at the 
admission to our Order of every new candidate for ceremonial initiation. For all real Initiation 
involves the use of the actual "silver cord" or life-line ; since such Initiation always occurs when the 
physical body is in a state of trance or sleep, and when the temporarily liberated consciousness has 
been transferred to a higher level. Thence it subsequently is brought back to the physical organism, 
the cerebral and nerve centres of which become illumined, revitalized and raised to a higher pitch of 
faculty than was previously possible. The perspicacious Royal Arch Mason will not fail to perceive 
how this truth is dramatically exemplified in that Degree. 

This subject might be considerably extended, for whilst in a ceremonial system l ik e the Masonic, 
only one initiation is portrayed (or, rather where initiation only occurs once), yet in the actual 
experience of soul-architecture Initiation succeeds Initiation upon increasingly higher levels of the 
ladder as the individual becomes correspondingly ripe for them, able to bear their strain and to 
assimilate their revelations . What the Craft teaching and symbols inculcate is a principle common 
to every degree of real Initiation that one may prove worthy to attain . For each upward step the 
candidate for the heights must be prepared as he is in the E .A . Degree; at each there will be the 
same peril in turning back, and at each the same menace directed against rashly rushing forward. 

THE APRON 

So much was said in my former volume. The Meaning of Masonry, in explanation of the Masonic 
Apron, that it seems needless to speak at length of it again . Yet, to maintain continuity of thought, 
it seems desirable once more to refer to its symbolism at this point, since we have been closely 
considering the manner in which consciousness becomes expanded and enveloped in bodies or 
vehicles appropriate to that expansion ; and we have been dealing with the arcanum or "mystery" 
propounded by St. Paul as to how the "dead" (the as yet uninitiated and spiritually unquickened), 
are raised up to a new order of life and the new kind of embodiment they take on, or automatically 
fabricate, in the process. 

Consciousness cannot exist without body . "To every seed (or conscious unit) its own body," says 
the Apostle-Initiate; or, as we Masons may paraphrase it, to every Degree of life is allotted the 
appropriate Apron, proclaiming the wearer's spiritual rank . As no one can enter the Fodge 
unclothed with the Apron, so no one can enter any of the unseen worlds without wearing a body 
appropriate. There are bodies terrestrial, adapted The to use on the lower planes of life ; and bodies 
Apron celestial or ethereal, adapted to functioning on higher ones. Man is a composite of many 
bodies, one within the other ; though ordinarily he is unaware of it and has not yet organized them 
and come to know them separately, as the Initiate is expected to do . 

The physical body is but one, and the grossest, of the terrestrial bodies ; it is but a plaster of 
organized chemical particles, within and around which his subtler bodies exist, and for which it 



forms a nexus or fixation-point. When totally discarded at death it disintegrates ; when partially 
abandoned in sleep or anmsthesia its energies persist passively, and connection with it is kept by the 
cabletow or "silver cord." In each case the Ego, whether aware of it or not, stands minus its physical 
sheath and enclosed in its remaining ones. And a similar divesting of each successive body may 
take place until only the ultimate Ego remains . 

That Ego, the ultimate Divine Principle in man, is represented by the triangular flap of the Masonic 
Apron. The triangle (or pyramid form) is the geometrical symbol for Spirit or Fire, and the ultimate 
Spirit of man may be likened to a pointed flame or tongue of fire . (The word "pyramid" derives 
from the Greek word pur, fire). 

The body or form (or rather the succession of bodies or forms), which that Ego assumes on 
descending into manifestation through the ladder- like planes of the Universe, aggregating to itself 
and organizing around itself material from each, is represented by the lower quadrangular part of 
the Apron . The quadrangle, square, or superficies, is the geometrical symbol for Body, Form, 
Physicalisation . The quadrangle is further appropriate because (1) all Body is constituted of four 
elements, earth, water, air, fire ; (2) because the human organism is fourfold, a complex of four 
distinct departments, physical, etheric, emotional and mental, and (3) because in man the three sub- 
human kingdoms (mineral, vegetable and animal), are unified into the human synthesis . 

The candidate's first investiture with the Apron is symbolic therefore of his Ego's entrance into this 
world, and becoming clothed with form or body. He is meant to realize himself as a sevenfold 
being, perfectly constituted originally in the Divine Mirid ; his triangle of Spirit combining with the 
quadrangle of materialized form to make up the perfect number seven . He is meant to realize that 
he has descended to a condition of embodiment and limitation of consciousness for the purpose of 
acquiring experience in those conditions, and of performing certain work upon himself which shall 
raise him- to full realization of his own ultimate nature and of the Divine purpose in him, and that 
though his present state or form is one of restrictedness and humiliation, it will never disgrace him 
if he never disgraces it. 

In the First Degree, the triangular flap of the Apron is kept erect . In the Second it is lowered . 
Thereby is denoted the physiological truth that the Ego or human Spirit on entering this world at 
birth does not immediately attain full embodiment, but at first is, as it were, an overhovering 
presence, organically connected with the body, but only The gradually taking possession of it . We 
recognize this Apron truth in practical life. Moral and legal responsibility is never attributed to a 
child under seven years of age, for the moral sense has not yet developed . Important physiological 
changes connected with puberty occur at the age of fourteen . Civic responsibility is denied until 
twenty-one is reached . The basic reason for all this is the occult truth that the Ego does not attain 
its maximum of incarnation until twenty-one. Accordingly it is not until age is reached that a man is 
presumed competent to enter the Craft and undertake the science of himself. 

As the Ego immerses itself in its body and works upon it, it creates changes in it, whether for good 
or evil. It either organizes or disorganizes its vehicles according to its will and desires . It becomes 
an artificer in metals, whether base or precious ; it either stores itself with ornaments and jewels and 
the invaluable furniture of self-knowledge, or with useless trumperies and grotesque contrivances of 
which sooner or later it must get rid . Assuming its activities to have been wisely directed, they are 
evidenced in the Apron by the blue rosettes imposed upon it in the Second Degree ; if they are 
persisted in and the Spirit more and more subjugates and controls the Form, that increasing 
domination and the further progress made in the science are testified to by the additional 
elaborations found in the Apron in the Third Degree. Still more advanced progress is evidenced by 
further changes and beautification of the Apron in the Royal Arch Degrees, and in the Grand 
Lodges of provinces, and of the nation . 



The Tau displayed upon the Apron worn by those of Master rank is a form of the Cross, and also of 
the Hammer of Thor, of Scandinavian religion . It is displayed triply, to signify that the wearer has 
brought his three lower natures (physical, emotional, and mental) under complete control ; that he 
has crucified them and keeps them repressed by the hammer of a strong will . 

The further important point should be noticed that the Apron covers the creative, generative organ 
of the body ; and it is especially to these that the significance of the Tau attaches . Spiritual self 
building and the erection of the "superstructure" are dependent upon the supply of creative energy 
available from the generative nervous centre, the "power-house" of the human organism . Thence 
that energy passes upwards through other ganglionic "transformers" and, reaching the brain, 
becomes finally sublimated and transformed to consciousness . Conservation of that energy is 
therefore indispensable both for generating consciousness and providing the material for the finer 
vehicle or "superstructure" in which that consciousness may function ; the life-energy is always 
creative, either in the direction of physical propagation or in that of super-physical up-building ; 
hence the importance attached in religious spheres to celibacy . 

It should also be noted that in the three Craft Degrees, the investiture with the Apron is made in the 
West ; and not by the Master, but by his principal officer who is deputed to bestow it . The meaning 
behind this important detail is that while the human Ego is resident in this temporal world ("the 
West"), Nature, as the chief officer and deputy of Providence, supplies it with bodies of her own 
material and temporal substance . But in all cases beyond those three, the investiture takes place in 
the "East" the realm of spirit, and from the hands of the Master himself. For the progressed soul 
receives a clothing beyond Nature's power to supply ; and, without intermediate hands, "God giveth 
it a body as it pleaseth Him," and to every such soul its own body, according to its measure of 
progress and consciousness. 

THE WIND 

The Instruction Lectures of the First Degree (unfortunately not used in some Lodges), contain a 
curious reference to the blowing of the wind, which must puzzle a good many minds. What has the 
wind to do with Masonic work, and why should it be particularly favourable to that work when 
blowing from East to West or vice versa? 

Again we must look below the letter of the reference. The subject has not been introduced without 
purpose and instructiveness, to discern which will once more reveal the wisdom of the compilers 
and the crypticism with which they purposely shielded it when preparing our system for more or 
less promiscuous use . 

The wind referred to is not the atmospheric breeze. It is that Wind (Pneuma) which "bloweth where 
it listeth" ; the Wind of the Spirit ; the currents of Divine Energy. 

The "East" and the "West" are not our ordinary geographical directions of space. In Initiate and 
Biblical language, as in the quarters of the Lodge, the East is the realm of Spirit and Light ; the 
West that of Matter and Darkness, the place of the disappearing sun . Man partakes of both ; he is 
polarised east-west, as Spirit-Matter in one . 

When, mystically, the wind blows east-west, a current of Divine Energy has set in towards the west, 
stimulating,, vitalizing and enlightening it. When it blows west-east, man has himself directed a 
current of aspiration from his own spirit eastwards to God. 


The wind is therefore said to be specially favourable to Masonic work when blowing from either of 
those points of the mystical compass. When the Mason sends up his aspirations to the heights, as he 



should perpetually be doing, he is as a dynamo generating and transmitting an electric current 
upwards ; that is, eastwards . When the Divine Fire descends upon himself, a similar current has set 
in westwards . It is written elsewhere and in the same sense, "As the lightning shineth from the east 
unto the west, so is the coming of the Son of Man" into the personal consciousness . 

Prayer, upward aspiration in the above sense, is a practical scientific necessity for the work of the 
spiritual Craftsman. He himself is but as the leaden weight swinging at the lower end of the string 
of the plumb-rule. The string itself is as the connecting wire between that weight and the top of the 
plumb rule, a wire through which a current may pass up or down. Until that instrument is held erect, 
and the leaden weight brought to stillness and steadiness, it is ineffective for any form of work . So 
long as man is spiritually unaligned and out of plumb with his The spiritual pole, directness of 
current between them Wind is impossible. When that current is established the lead of darkness and 
ignorance may become transmuted into the gold of conscious light and wisdom by the alchemy of 
the Spirit . 

Real Initiates have always known there to be both special times and seasons, and special localities 
favourable to inducing the flow of currents of Divine Energy ; but of these the modem Mason has 
not yet come to learn, though there are references to them in his system. The two solstices and 
equinoxes are such times, and others are known in the greater Churches whose calendar of feasts 
and fasts have been based upon this principle . The Festivals of the two Masonic patron-saints, St. 
John Baptist at midsummer, and St. John the Divine at mid-winter, have special bearing upon 
favourable times for spiritual Craftsmanship, but the former is now ignored, and the latter profaned. 
The matter may be left to the' reflection of Brethren . When the Craft comes better to realize its 
purpose and science, these times and seasons will be taken advantage of for the furtherance of both 
individual and collective Masonic work . 

The teaching in the Instruction Lecture upon the wind is supplemented by a reference to the escape 
of the Israelites from Egyptian bondage under their Master Moses, who caused a mighty east wind 
to blow, dividing the waters of the Red Sea to permit of their safe passage, which waters then rolled 
back and overwhelmed Pharaoh and his pursuing army . Again, the bearing of this episode is lost 
upon the average Brother, who for want of a key fails to see its relevance to any form of Masonry . 
And, indeed, it carries us into much deeper water than the average mind bathes in, although to those 
versed in Initiation science, the striking biblical incident masks and prefigures an equally 
momentous one in the individual life of everyone who seeks to fulfill his own spiritual evolution . 

The allusion is to the important crisis which occurs when the personal soul of the aspirant ardently 
aspires for complete liberation from the tyranny of the flesh . It is then possible, in proper cases, - 
and this was part of the office of the old Mysteries-for one who is a real Master so to act upon and 
separate his disciple's interior organic structures as to effect a permanent liberation of the latter's 
consciousness from sensual bondage. The "waters" that are then "divided" are what have previously 
been explained as those of the fluidic subtle body of desire and emotion, which normally constitute 
an untraversable barrier between the highest and the lowest elements in our nature. "Wretched man 
that I am, who shall deliver me from this body of death ?" exclaimed one who afterwards attained 
delivery. For the "body of death" is made up of all those lower natures in us which inhibit 
consciousness in the spirit ; and, as we have elsewhere stated, it is dissociable by a competent adept 
Master, who holds the keys of life and death (i.e., consciousness and unconsciousness in the spirit) . 
The higher nature of the disciple is then liberated from the bondage of the lower ; his waters are 
divided ; he passes through them into permanent safety from the Pharaoh-l ik e tyranny of his 
material vesture; the still pursuing tendencies Seeking of which are checked, overwhelmed and shut 
off a when the temporarily held up waters are permitted Master to roll back to their former channel, 
to the extreme joy of the now liberated disciple. 



This is an incident of real Initiation, and it is achievable only under the guidance of the equivalent 
of a Moses, a real Master. To those unversed in the deeper aspects of Initiation science, what 
cannot here be more than briefly explained may appear incredible, as would much more that lies 
concealed beneath the symbols and the text of the Masonic system. But those responsible for 
compiling or inspiring that system were clearly deeply versed in much that they permitted 
themselves to do no more than hint at, and it remains for reflective Masons to penetrate their 
disguises by their own research, intuition and perspicacity. 

SEEKING A MASTER 

The junior Brother learns that, as a Mason, his duty is to seek a Master and from him gain 
instruction, and usually supposes that by making acquaintance with the W .M. of his Lodge, and 
learning by rote the rituals and lectures, he is fulfilling that duty . If he desires nothing more than 
ceremonial Masonry, he is doubtless doing all that need be expected of him. But if he be in earnest 
quest of that to which ceremonial Masonry is but an entrance-portal, he may be interested in the 
following considerations . 

It is axiomatic in the traditional secret wisdom that real Initiation is not to be looked for save at the 
hands of one who has himself experienced it. And it is equally axiomatic that "when the disciple is 
ready, the Master will be found waiting ." The modern Masonic student will be well advised to 
accept both these axioms as being as valid to-day as they have ever been in the past . 

A Master is not easily found . But neither is he often properly sought . "Ask, seek, knock," are 
simple words to say with the tongue . Their putting into effective operation is a task involving 
persistent and concentrated will . Under no circumstances does a Master ever proclaim himself as 
such ; he must be sought, must be clearly recognized and wholeheartedly accepted as one ; and you 
may have grave doubts of his status and your own judgment about him before according him that 
confidence. You might live in close contact with a Master for years without suspecting the fact . 
Recognition being due to spiritual rapport, to vibratory harmony and to intuitional certainty ; until 
you possess these a Master's physical personality will convey no more to you than any other man's . 
But of one thing be assured ; the Master will know you through and through long before you 
recognize him, or perhaps even realize that you are seeking him . 

Exoterically, in the Operative Mason's trade, the youth proposing to enter a Building Guild had first 
to find a Master Mason who would accept him as his apprentice and to whom he became bound for 
seven years, the Master making himself responsible for his maintenance and training . In spiritual 
Craftsmanship precisely the same method applies . The Master has first to be sought and found, 
and, if the disciple be accepted, he must be served and implicitly obeyed for a similar probationary 
period, the Master assuming a real (not a nominal) spiritual sponsorship for the pupil. The 
association not being for any temporal advantage but for purely self- less spiritual advancement, the 
intimacy is of the closest, as the responsibility is of the gravest, character . For the apprentice is to 
become spiritually integrated with the Master. To use the beautiful touching simile of the greatest of 
Masters, as a hen gathers her chickens under her wing, so is the pupil to become gathered and built 
into the very being of his teacher. The real Initiation (or rather sequence of Initiations) the pupil 
hopes in due course to attain cannot be achieved until this intimate relationship exists . 

In the days of the Ancient Mysteries, Masters were to be found resident in the seclusion of the 
Temples, for Initiation science was then an organised institution, publicly recognized . In the Orient, 
no such formal organization has obtained, but the practice, both in the past and to-day, is for the 
aspirant to seek and find his appropriate Master, the onus of searching being upon the former, and 
serving as a test of his earnestness and perspicuity. The Master is there termed a Guru (defined as 
"one who removes the veil of darkness from the spiritual eyes of the pupil"), and the accepted pupil 



a Chela or spiritual child, in the same sense that St. John addresses his pupils as "little children 
The ancient Sanskrit word Guru passed from India to Asia Minor and Greece, and reappears in the 
latter part of the name of such ancient Initiates as Protagoras, Anaxagoras, Pythagoras . The last- 
mentioned of these literally means the Pitta (or Pater) Guru, the Master or Father-Teacher, as in fact 
he was in his day ; and the continuity of both the science and of the title Guru is further evidenced 
by the fact that that title is preserved both in Hebrew and in Masonry in the name of Hiram Abiff 
(spelt also in the Scriptures as Huram and Churam Abiff). Hiram Abiff has precisely the same 
meaning as Pythagoras, the Father-Teacher, or alternatively the Teacher from the Father . The 
Egyptian form of the name Hiram is Hermes, the teacher of the secret or "hermetic" science and 
wisdom, and the student is strongly urged to study those two important ancient treatises of 
Initiation-science, the Divine Pymander of Hermes and "The Shepherd of Hermas." 

("Shepherd" is the ancient and biblical word signifying "Initiator" or "Hierophant ." Hence "the 
Good Shepherd," "the Great Shepherd of the sheep," "The Lord is my Shepherd ." The "Shepherds 
watching their flocks" at the time of the Nativity were not rustics or farmers, but spiritual adepts in 
charge of groups of initiate pupils.) 

A Master, while rejoiced to find a suitable pupil, does not accept him without subjecting him to 
severe preliminary tests . He "knows what is in man." No hypocrisy deceives him . He discerns the 
thoughts and desires of the heart of the intending candidate, and sees whether the latter is properly 
prepared there, and really anxious and ready for the work involved. Of this, an example came to my 
knowledge, which it may be useful to record, and to remember in connection with the acceptance of 
Masonic candidates . It was as follows : 

A young man in India sought out a venerable Master there and asked to be accepted as a pupil and 
trained for initiation ; he professed to want to find the Light, to know God at first hand . The old 
sage, after a searching glance into the aspirant's inward condition, discerned that the latter, while 
not insincere, was still a long way from readiness, and far from being sufficiently detached in desire 
for worldly possessions and sensual enjoyments ; and, explaining this, he firmly but kindly sent him 
away to exhaust or merge himself of these attractions, but with the suggestion that he might present 
himself again in two years' time . After two years, the young man returned, found the old Master 
bathing in the river at the foot of his garden, and from the river-bank renewed his application . 

Again the old man read his visitor's heart to its depths and perceived how divided it still was 
between the claims of the outer and the inner life ; but, calling him down into the river, he laid his 
hand upon the young one's head and gently pressed and held it below the surface of the water. 
Presently the young man forced it above the surface . "Why did you do that ?" he was asked. "I was 
obliged to do so to find breath ." Then came the Master's answer : "When you want God and the 
inward light as badly as you just now wanted breath, you may come back to me and you shall have 
your desire . But for the present you want other things as much, and you can't have both ." Like the 
other young man in the Gospels, the applicant went away sorrowful; but he had found his eventual 
Master and gained from him the instruction suitable to him at the moment. 

How, where, is one to seek one's Master, if he be so secluded, so hard to find ? He may be sought 
both without and within oneself . He should first be sought in every event of the daily life, in the 
person of everyone you meet. Linding him depends on the intensity of your search . "Seek and ye 
shall find" is not a vain promise. Look not to meet immediately with some learned or impressive 
personality capable of giving you all truth in tabloid form in a few hours . Linal truth cannot be 
communicated at all from one person to another orally ; it exists already within yourself and needs 
only to be dug out and ' liberated. Socrates-himself a Master, though the son of a poor midwife used 
to joke that he had inherited something of his mother's profession in that his task was to help others 
to bring truth to birth out of themselves ; and in the same sense the mediaeval teachers speak of 
using "the obstetric hand" in eliciting truth from their pupils rather than of instilling it into them . 



For the pupil has first to learn to clear away his own falsities and unrealities, so that what is already 
central in himself may no longer be obscured, but shine out , in its own self-conscious Light. 

When the time is ripe and the pupil in a deep sense ready, he may come to meet a Master literally 
and in personal wise. But a Master, being one who has evolved in his spirit, is no longer to be 
thought of as a separate independent person, although displaying a separate personality and 
presence to the world. He is integrated with others of the same rank ; he is part of a group, all the 
members of which are conscious on the plane of Spirit. And Spirit is universal, not fettered by 
place, time, or space. What the group perceives, each of its parts sees, and vice versa. Remember 
the All-seeing Eye, the universal Watchman, that perceives you and knows the quality of your 
spirit, though you yourself know nothing of it. 

Until, then, a Master is met with personally, the search should persist in confidence that he will be 
found. Responses, justifying your confidence and demonstrating that the Eye is watching you, will 
come in unsuspected ways to the earnest seeker ; perhaps from a chance passage in an apparently 
quite irrelevant book you may be led to pick up ; perhaps from a casual meeting with a stranger, an 
offhand remark, the conversation of a friend who speaks more wisely and pointedly to you than he 
himself realises. Through such and other ways may the veiled Master look or speak to you, and 
proportionately to the ardour of your search will you find evidences of his presence and 
watchfulness . A saintly woman, a great British poetess, so keenly sought a Master in the details of 
daily life that she would pick up torn scraps of paper in the street on the chance that they might 
reveal his name or yield some evidence of him. Another seeker traveled across the world in blind 
faith that somewhere the unknown Master would be found. One day in the street of a foreign city 
the recognition came suddenly ; before a stranger in the crowd the seeker stopped, saying "Master, 
teach me ! " and the search was ended. 

"The Master" to be sought, then, is a comprehensive term-abstract and mystical if you will, but 
standing for a reality embracing many personal Masters integrated in it. In seeking a personal 
Master, one seeks also the group of which he is a member ; in seeking the impersonal Master one 
may be brought into personal contact with one of that group. Life in the realm of Spirit is a unity, 
not a diversity, and for Masonic seekers the wide world over, of whatever nation or creed, there is 
but one Grand Master and Hierophant, but He can manifest and deputize through divers channels . 
As in the Craft Lodge there is but one Master, yet many of equal rank capable of representing him 
and doing his work, so has the world's Grand Master in the heights His associates and deputies here 
in its dark depths . 

So far we have spoken only of seeking exteriorly, for an outward personal Master. But the search 
can and should also be made interiorly, within oneself ; for what is sought subjectively and 
spiritually can then more readily come to be realized and found objectively . The great Indian 
manual of Initiation (the Bhagavad-Gita) therefore teaches: 

There lives a Master in the hearts of men 

Who makes their deeds, by subtle-pulling strings. 

Dance to what time He will . With all thy soul 

Trust Him, and take Him for thy succour . 

So shalt thou gain, 


By grace of Him, the uttermost repose, 



The Eternal Peace. 


Seek therefore to realize the Master in the heart . Conceive him imaginatively . Build up in your 
constant thought a mental image of him, invested with the nature and qualities of that master-soul to 
whom you look to raise you from your present deadness, to remove the stone from your sepulcher, 
and to utter to your inmost self that vibrant word of liberating power, "Lazarus, come forth !" For 
until you have in yourself something in common with him, points of fellowship with him-be it but a 
bare desire for resemblance-how shall you expect to be raised into fullness of identic relationship 
with him, to be "gathered as a chicken under his wing?" 

Our Science in its universality limits our conception of the Master to no one exemplar . Take, it 
says, the nearest and most familiar to you, the one under whose aegis you were racially born and 
who therefore may serve you best ; for each is able to bring you to the centre, though each may 
have his separate method. To the Jewish Brother it says, take the Father of the faithful, and realize 
what being gathered to his bosom means . To the Christian Brother, it points to Him upon whose 
breast lay the beloved disciple, and urges him to reflect upon what that implies. To the Hindu 
Brother it points to Krishna, who came and rode in the same chariot with Arjuna, and bids him look 
to a similar intimate union . To the Buddhist it points to the Maitreya of universal compassion, and 
bids him reflect upon him till he become drawn beneath his bo-tree ; and to the Moslem it points to 
his Prophet, and the significance of being clothed with the latter's mantle . 

Let the earnest Craftsman, then, seek a Master where and how he will. He cannot-experto crede fail 
to find. Failure to find will be due to his having failed, rightly, and from his heart, to seek. 

WAGES 

Initiates of the secret science in the past ("our ancient Brethren") are said to have been paid wages . 
The wages, we are told, were paid in the porchway of the Temple ; and, much or little, they were 
accepted without demur, because of the recipients' complete confidence in their employers and the 
recognition that only so much would be received as their work was actually worth . The Masonic 
tradition asserts that the wages were not paid in cash-cash was of no use to those who had already 
learned to do without money and metals-but in corn, wine, and oil . (Note the threefold form of the 
wages) . 

Wages of the same kind are still paid to real Craftsmen in the same place, and in the same mode . 
The porchway of the Temple figures the outer natural life which forms a portal to an inner 
supernatural life at the central sanctuary which we have not yet consciously reached, but to which 
we labour to ascend by an in-winding stairway, gradually rebuilding body and mind on the way 
with a view to acquiring a new reconstituted organism appropriate and adapted to that sublime 
degree of. life. 

Such a new body and mind require sustenance to build them, and the food we consume becomes 
built into our organism. What we eat, we become. Corn goes to body-building, the fashioning of 
substantiality and structural form . Wine goes to the vitalizing and stimulating of the mind, 
strengthening the intellect, deepening the inner vision . Oil is a lubricant for the system, enabling its 
parts to run smoothly and without friction. 

In their higher symbolism Corn (or Bread) and Wine relate to those of the Altar, and were 
Eucharistic elements in the Mysteries long before the Christian Master in a certain "upper room" (or 
higher level of application) took over and gave a new application to the wheat of Ceres and the wine 
of Bacchus-Dionysos ; while Oil, the crushed out and refined product of the olive, refers to that 
Wisdom which is the ultimate essence of experience and knowledge, and which has been 



associated, in the different Mystery teachings, with Minerva, with Solomon, and with the Mount of 
Olives . 


The spiritual Craftsman not only earns his own wages proportionately to his work; his own labours 
automatically supply them . God, as his employer, has already lodged them within him in advance ; 
he has only to appropriate them as he becomes justly entitled to them by his own labours, as the 
sons of Jacob found their money restored to them in their corn-sacks . 

The Mason 'is himself l ik ened to an ear of corn, nourished by a fall of the Water of Life . In virtue 
of the animal element in his nature he is himself "the ox that treadeth out the corn," separating his 
own golden grain from the stalk that bore it. He is himself the "threshing floor of Araunah," 
winnowing his own chaff from his own wheat. He treads his own wine-press alone ; in singleness of 
effort and in the solitude of his own thought distilling his own vintage, until the cup of his mind 
runs over with the wine of a new order of intelligence . He is his own oil-press, and out of his own 
experience and self-realisation extracts wisdom-that oil which anoints him with a joy and an ability 
above his fellows, and that runs down to the "sk ir ts of his clothing," manifesting itself in his 
personality and in all his activities . 

Corn, wine, and oil, are therefore laid upon the altar at the consecration of every Masonic Lodge ; 
they are the emblems of a Craftsman's wages . Upon the collar of Grand Lodge Officers are 
displayed ears of wheat and sprays of olive, the symbolic indication that those who arrive at the 
summit of their profession possess that which they exhibit, and are able to minister bread and wine 
and oil to those below them in the Order. 

There are less agreeable forms of wages, however, but such as also are to be received without 
scruple or mistrust, for they are both disciplinary and signs of progress . A man cannot set up to re- 
form his old nature and readjust his interior constitution without feeling it, or without unsettling the 
fabric of his emotional and mental sheaths . Accordingly, it is a common experience with those who 
take themselves seriously in hand in the task of self re-building that unexpected obstacles suddenly 
arise ; the wages that come to them are those of adversity in temporal affairs, sickness, the turning 
away of former friends, and the l ik e. There is good reason for this . Within ourselves are sown the 
seeds of all our past activities and emotional tendencies, good or evil. Within ourselves are stored 
all our old mind- forms and fabrications of base metal . To try to disturb the former or to divest 
ourselves of the latter, promotes immediate reaction from them . 

He who deliberately invokes the Light upon himself, as the earnest Masonic aspirant does, ipso 
facto utters, with corresponding intensity, a challenge to his own bad past, his own unreal self . And 
if his invocation be effective, the Light streaming into him from his own dormer-window, whilst 
giving him illumination, will also play upon and stimulate in him all that is undesirable, as sunlight 
stirs to activity the unpleasant insects dwelling in darkness beneath a stone that is suddenly removed 
from an old position . Light impartially affects both the good .and evil in oneself, as the sunshine 
causes a rose to bloom, and a lump of carrion by its side to putrefy. It induces new growth in a 
spiritual sense, but it also, and at the same time, accelerates the germination of seeds implanted in 
us, which, but for it, would continue to lie dormant and unmatured until a more favourable time . 
Under the discipline of Initiation the seeds or compressed results of one's own past, the potential 
reactions from one's own former actions and inaction, all that goes to make up a man's fate and that, 
if unchecked, will shape his future destiny, are brought to a sudden head and crisis ; the normal 
slower development they would have undergone, if not so interfered with, becomes interrupted, 
expedited. It is often as though vials of undeserved wrath break upon the devoted head of him who 
at last has- struck the road to salvation, and is resolved at all costs to follow it . And yet these are 
the wages he receives for his laudable enterprise ! Lacking self-knowledge as yet, ignorant of what 
is latent in him, not realizing that the path of Initiation is one of intensive culture and accelerated 



evolution, he may become dismayed from further pursuing his quest, unless he be made aware that 
these wages are actually due to him, that they represent his past earnings, that he is justly entitled to 
them, and that the sooner the debit and credit sides of his own self- written judgment-ledger are 
balanced, the freer will he be to proceed with his newly undertaken building-work. 

"The wages of sin are death"-death in the sense of being spiritually unconscious, however 
vigorously alive in other ways . "Sin" in all or any of its forms is, in its final analysis, disharmony 
induced by the assertion of the unreal personal self in unalignment with the impersonal Universal 
Self, the Holy Spirit. But the Path of Initiation involves the obliteration of all sense of the personal 
self. The just and perfect man and Mason is therefore one who is utterly selfless ; being selfless he 
is sinless ; and being sinless he stands in, consciously shares, and becomes the instrument of, the 
divine Kingdom, Power and Glory. 

THE LAW OF THE MOUNT 

In Masonry, as in the Scriptures and every other ancient expression of mystical teaching, there is 
frequent allusion to mountains and bills, and to the work of Lodges and Chapters being, conducted 
upon them. 

Let it be understood at once that in no case is the allusion to any physical mountain or geographical 
position, but to the spiritual elevation of the work undertaken by some particular group or school of 
Initiates . Spiritual science has nothing to do with material things or places, save in so far as the 
latter serve as a foundation-stone or point of departure for achieving spiritual results . 

From immemorial time the Vedists of India have spoken of their sacred Mount Meru, which, later 
in history, becomes reproduced among the Hebrews as Mount Moriah. The Greeks had their 
Mounts Olympus and Parnassus, on the summits of which dwelt the Gods . The Israelites obtained 
their law from Divine hands on Mount Sinai ; the Christians theirs from the Mount of Olives . The 
woodwork for Solomon's Temple came from the Mountains of Lebanon. The Gospels tell of the 
"exceeding high mountain" of Temptation and of the Mount of Transfiguration . Prometheus was 
immolated upon a mountain of the Caucasus (or Ko-Kajon, i.e., "ethereal space"), and Christ upon 
the Hill Calvary. Mediaeval Christian mystical . tradition tells of the hidden sanctuary of the 
mysteries and the holy Grail built upon Mont Salvatch (the mount of safety or salvation) in the 
Pyrenees (which is another form of "Parnassus .") 

None of these mountains are situate in this world, in time or place. The names are mystical names 
associated with super-physical heights to which man in his spiritual consciousness may ascend . 
Mountains bearing those names, or some of them, do exist on the map, but their names and the 
ideas they connote existed long before they were given a local association for symbolic purposes . 
There is scarcely a country without its sacred mountain that reminds its inhabitants of the heavenly 
heights and to which sacred traditions are not attached . The snow-clad Himalayas have always 
typified the eternal heavens to the East ; Fujiyama is the sacred mountain of Japan, as Snowdon is 
of Britain ; and if such places have been, as indeed they have, the scenes of religious practices, their 
sanctity derives less from what has occurred there than from the ideas that resulted in those 
practices . The names of these sacred mountains are drawn almost always from ideas representative 
of the religion of the district, and constitute a sort of spiritual geography which nations of great 
spiritual genius, such as the Indians, the Greeks, and the Hebrews, have been faithful in preserving . 
Subsequently the materializing tendencies of the human mind liberalise and localize what originally 
existed as a purely spiritual idea . 

When Initiates of the past are said to have held Lodges and performed their work upon this or that 
hill or mountain, the meaning is that they were engaged in work of a high spiritual order and 



efficacy-work entirely beyond the conception of the average modern and merely ceremonial Mason 
. The actual place at which they met for such work may or may not have been upon a physical 
eminence . Often it was not, as abundant evidence might be brought to show . The entirely super- 
physical nature of their work may be deduced from an old Scottish Degree of advanced Masonry, 
which speaks, with a dry humour that to the inexpert eye will seem grotesque and irreverent, of 
their Lodge having originally been held upon a hill in the North of Scotland, a place "where a cock 
never crowed, a lion never roared, and a woman never tattled." Now in traditional esoteric 
terminology, as also in the Bible, the "North" signifies that which is spiritual and ever 
unmanifested, as the other three cardinal points of space indicate varying degrees of spiritual 
manifestation. The allusion to cock-crow is to the guilty conscience of Peter, which could only exist 
in the world of time and in one who is spiritually imperfect . The allusion to the lion is to the Evil 
One "going about as a roaring lion" in the lower world, but unable to enter the Paradisal world ; 
whilst the third reference is to the contemplative silence of the soul (the "woman") upon that high 
plane of life of which the Psalmist says that "there is neither speech nor language but their voices 
are heard among them ." In the Odyssey, Homer testifies to the same truth when Ulysses is told in 
regard to certain mysteries, "Be silent ; repress your intellect, and do not speak ; such is the method 
of the Gods upon Olympus ." 

It must be left to the reader's own research and reflection to deduce the nature of the spiritual work 
undertaken by real Initiates ; he will discover that it is work that is not performed in the physical 
body or with that body's faculties, but upon the ethereal planes and with a higher order of faculty 
than the average man of to-day has learned to cultivate. For a striking instance of the kind of work 
implied, reference can be made to the narrative contained in the 19th and 24th chapters of Exodus, 
describing a Lodge of the elders or Adept-Initiates of Israel upon "Mount Sinai" ; though for the 
instructed reader many other passages of l ik e information are to be found in both sections of the 
Sacred Law, as also elsewhere . 

To pass to a less abstruse and more elementary point, those who seek to become real Initiates and 
aspire to the work upon the mountain-tops that is feasible only to such, must first conform 
themselves to the Law of the Mount . That law may be so called because it involves a loftier 
teaching and a totally different order of conduct from those to which the uninitiated popular world 
conforms . We have a reference to this in the direction that a Mason's conduct ought to be such as 
will "distinguish and set him above the ranks-of other men," and not merely leave him at their level 
. Hence the instruction given by the Great Master to his initiate disciples, which is called the 
"Sermon on the Mount," and is popularly supposed to have been delivered upon a hill-side . There 
exist, however, many great pieces of Initiation-teaching going by that name, notably the great and 
eloquent discourses known as The Divine Poemander of Hermes ; and all of them are called 
"sermons on the mount," not because of having necessarily been delivered upon any actual 
mountain, but because they relate to spiritualities and to the loftier plane of thought and action upon 
which every Initiate must live . The "Mount" is that of Initiation, where alone, in the silence of the 
senses, the spirit of man can learn the things of the spirit. 

That the standard of thought and conduct for Initiates is always beyond the capacity of the popular 
world is evidenced by the fact that society, however advanced in civilization, find itself quite unable 
to act up to it. Even the Churches find the Sermon on the Mount impracticable doctrine for general 
social observance . It is regarded as a counsel of perfection, and eminent clerics are found declaring 
that it was never meant to apply to the unforeseen, complex social conditions of to-day, and declare 
that, whilst sound as a theoretic ideal, it must be compromised with in practice . From their low 
level of outlook they are right. The popular world is truly quite unable to act up to the terms of the 
Law of the Mount. But it is overlooked that that high doctrine was not meant for the popular world 
nor addressed to it. It was delivered to, and intended for, those few who have outgrown and 



renounced the ideals of the outer world and who seek initiation into a new and higher order of life 
which contradicts the wisdom of that world at every point . 

But the real Initiate must observe it at all cost and conflict to himself, and is told that unless his 
righteousness exceeds that of popular orthodoxy and convention, he cannot hope to realize the goal 
at which he aims . The whole life of the real Initiate, and of those aiming to become such, will be at 
cross purposes with the standards and methods of the rest of the world, which will be as it were in 
conspiracy against him for not conforming to its ways ; and, as with Hiram Abiff, at every attempt 
to leave the . gates of his temple and come into contact with the outer world, he will find himself 
opposed by persecuting "ruffians," by objections to his refusal to fall in with popular conventions, 
and by demands to know the secrets of his superiority to them . Hence one of the reasons for the 
silence and obscurity of real Initiates, as also for Masonic secrecy, is self-protection, which the 
Christian Master gave as a justification for not casting pearls before those incapable of appreciating 
them "lest they turn and rend you 

The way of the natural uninitiated man is that of self-assertion and material acquisitiveness ; he is 
bent upon securing all he can get from this world ; and wisdom, knowledge, and power, are what 
seem to be such in his own eyes . He is not wrong or blameworthy ; he is simply fulfilling the law 
of his present nature, which is the only law he as yet knows ; he is merely ignorant and self-blinded 
to any higher nature and law. The initiated man is one to whom a higher nature and law have 
become revealed, and who, conscious of their compulsion upon himself, has abjured all the ideals of 
his less advanced fellows. He lives upon the Mount and fulfils the law of the Mount ; and therefore 
to him come wisdom, grace and power transcending anything his uninitiated fellowmen can as yet 
conceive . Initiates were termed by the Great Master the "salt of the earth," for, without their 
leavening presence in it, the world would descend to greater corruption than it at present suffers . 
"Ten just men (i.e., Initiates) shall save the city," as was said of those "cities of the plain" which are 
a figure of civilization at large . 

It is not, however, for his personal aggrandizement or salvation that a man seeks, or should seek, 
Initiation into the higher order of life, or should aspire for the wisdom and power that therewith 
come. To do so from this motive would be merely to imitate the ways of the outer world, apart from 
the fact that it would neutralize the whole purpose of Initiation. His real purpose is to help on the 
world's advancement, to become one of its saviours, at the sacrifice of himself. For the real Initiate 
is self-less ; he has abandoned all personal claims and the "rights" to which lesser men claim to be 
entitled ; and, having crucified his own personality, is able to look upon human life impersonally 
and to offer himself as an instrument for its redemption . When wisdom and power come to him, 
they are not for his own use but for the help of the whole race ; he is a Master among men, because 
he is a universal servant ; he is the most effective spokesman in the world, because of his utter 
silence. 

Masonic secrecy and silence are inculcated for this very reason ; for all spiritual power is generated 
in silence. In silence the aspirant must concentrate his own energies and climb from his own earth 
into his own heavens, -rendering to the Caesar of the outer world the things that are his, but in other 
respects fulfilling the law of the Mount in a way that will "distinguish and set him above the ranks 
of other men" who are not yet ready or prepared to follow him . If the Masonic Brotherhood has not 
yet risen to full appreciation of the meaning of its own system, it nevertheless stands provided with 
all the information needful to lead it to Initiation in the high sense indicated throughout these pages, 
to which each of its members may aspire if he follow the Ancient Sage in Tennyson's poem and 

Leave the hot swamp of voluptuousness, 


A cloud between the Nameless and thyself ; 



And lay thine uphill shoulder to the wheel 


And climb the Mount of Blessing ; whence, if thou 
Look higher, then perchance thou mays't-beyond 
A hundred ever-rising mountain-lines, 

And past the range of Night and Shadow-see 
The high-heaven dawn of more than mortal day 
Strike on the Mount of Vision ! 

"FROM LABOUR TO REFRESHMENT'" 

The Masonic reader who recognizes that every reference in Speculative Masonry is figurative and 
carries a symbolic significance behind the literal sense of the words, will at once dismiss from his 
mind any suggestion that the formula of adjourning the Lodge from labour to refreshment, and of 
recalling it from refreshment to labour, relates to the customary practice of passing from the formal 
work of the Lodge to the informalities of the dining-table. 

The familiar formula of dismissing the Lodge after seeing that every Brother has received his due, 
no doubt came over into the present system from Operative usage when Guild-masons periodically 
received their material wages . But it has now become the Ite, Missa est ! of spiritual Masonry, and 
carries a sacramental meaning. We have to consider what labour, refreshment, and dues, are in their 
higher and concealed sense . 

First as to Labour. The allusion is less to the temporary ceremonial work of the Lodge than to the 
work the earnest Light- seeker is continually to be engaged upon in his task of self-perfecting . Let it 
be realized that this is labour indeed, to be undertaken with earnestness and vigour, "Hie labor; hoc 
opus est," wrote Virgil of it. "The Gods sell their arts only to those who sweat for them" runs 
another ancient adage of the science. Purification of the bodily senses and reformation of personal 
defects are but part, the simpler and grosser part, of the work ; the redirection of one's mind and will 
to the ideal involved, the requisite research and study conducing to that end, and the necessary 
control and concentration of thought and desire upon the end in view, are not child's-play nor 
matters of casual, superficial interest. 

Intellectual and spiritual labour necessitate rest and refreshment, equally with physical, that the 
harvest of that labour may be assimilated . Wise activity (Boaz) must be balanced with an equally 
wise passivity (Jachin) if one is to become established in immortal strength and to stand firm, 
spiritually consolidated and perfect in all one's parts . Nor is it a work to be hurried ; those build 
most surely who build slowly. Festina lente [-hasten slowly, is an old maxim of the work addressed 
to those who would "lay great bases for eternity ." "Ne quid nimis !" is another ; "let nothing be 
done in excess ." 

Now it is not easy to combine work of this nature with that which the exigencies of one's normal 
duties and responsibilities entail . But to those who are in earnest, the co-adaptation and 
harmonizing of all one's duties will form part of the work itself ; one's present position and 
avocation will be discerned to be precisely those suited to making advancement, and to provide 
opportunities for doing so. Doubtless difficulty and opposition will be encountered in abundance ; 
but these again are parts of the process and tests of fidelity . No growth is possible without 



resistance to draw out latent power. The aspirant must steadily and conscientiously persevere along 
the path to what he seeks, just as each candidate engages himself to do so in respect of its 
ceremonial portrayal ; and every Brother may be assured of receiving his exact dues for the labour 
he expend. 

"There is a time to work and a time to sleep ." Respite from labour is as contributive an element to 
progress as labour itself, for the mind must digest, and the whole nature assimilate, what it absorbs . 
More may be learned from the Teacher in the heart than from what is gathered by the head, when 
that Teacher-the principle at the Centreis once awakened. Meditation and reflection are of greater 
instructiveness than book-reading and information acquired from without oneself. 

Thinks't thou among the mighty sum 

Of things for ever speaking. 

That nothing of itself will come, 

That we must still be seeking ? 

For the care and . nourishment of the outer body, Nature provides a passive, sympathetic system 
which arranges digestion, distributes energy, builds up the body, and discharges its functions for us 
without interference with our formal consciousness. In like manner, in our higher being resides a 
corresponding principle which winnows out thought, clarifies and arranges ideas, and settles 
problems and difficulties for us, in entire independence of our formal awareness . It is this higher 
principle that must be found, trusted and relied upon to participate in the work of interior up- 
building . The old writers call it the Archaeus, or the hidden Mercury, which ingarners and utili z es 
the fruit of our conscious efforts, building them up into a "super-structure" or subtle-body. As ages 
have gone to the organization of the physical body, so also long periods are requisite for that of the 
super-physical structure, the building of which is true Masonry ; but the process can be expedited 
by those who possess the science of it, as Masons are presumed to do . The process itself is the real 
Masonic "labour" ; and, as we have shown, it has its active and its passive aspects . 

This is a difficult subject to treat of briefly . Its nature is merely indicated here, and its fuller study 
must be left to individual research and, where possible, to personal tuition ; for this work is 
precisely that about which a Master-Mason is presumed to be able to give private instruction to 
Brethren in the inferior degrees . 

Let the reader reflect that Masonic "labour" involves the making of his being whole and perfect ; 
that it is intended to "render the circle of it complete." His complete being is likened, in geometrical 
terms, to a circle-the symbol of wholeness, entirety, self-containedness. But let him remember that 
as he knows himself at present, he is not a circle, but a square, which is but the fourth part of a 
circle . Where are the other three-fourths of himself ?- for until he knows these as well as the fourth 
part which he does know, he can never make the circle of his being complete, nor truly know 
himself. 

This is the point at which Masonry becomes mystical Geometry the important science of which 
Plato affirmed that no one should enter the Academy where true philosophy and ontology were to 
be learned, until he already was well versed in that science. For in former times these deeper 
problems of being were the subject of geometrical expression, and echoes of the science remain to 
us in our references to squares, triangles and circles, and particularly in the 47th problem of the first 
book of Euclid, which is now the distinctive emblem of those who have won to Mastership . How 
many of those who now wear that emblem, one wonders, have any conception of its significance ? 



It is a mathematical symbol representing, for those who can read it, the highest measure of human 
attainment in the science of reconstructing the human soul into the Divine image from which it has 
fallen away . No wonder the great Initiate who composed this symbol was raised to an ecstasy of 
joy on realizing in his own being all that it implies, depicts, and demonstrates, and that upon that 
fortunate occasion he "sacrificed a hecatomb of oxen"-an expression the meaning of which, l ik e the 
symbol itself, must be left to the reader's reflection, for these matters cannot be summarily or 
superficially explained . Pythagoras himself is said to have refused to explain them to his own 
pupils until they had undergone five years' silence and meditation upon them . Those five years 
represent the period that is still theoretically allotted to the work of the Fellow-Craft Degree, in 
regard to which the modern Mason is instructed to devote himself to reflecting upon the secrets of 
nature (i.e., his own nature) and the principles of intellectual truth, until they gradually disclose 
themselves to his view and reveal his own affiliation to the Deity . In declining to explain these 
geometrical truths to students until they had familiarized themselves with them for five years, the 
meaning of the great teacher of Crotona was that, by that time, the earnest disciple would have 
discerned their import, and gone far to realize it, for himself. 

Labour, understood in the sense here defined, and Refreshment after it, constitute a rhythm of 
activity and passivity ; a rhythm similar to that which we daily experience in respect of waking and 
sleeping, working and resting . To speak of Refreshment, however, in the deeper sense implied in 
Masonry is even more difficult than to speak of the philosophic Labour ; for it involves a subject to 
which few devote deep thought-the subjective side of the soul's life as distinct from the objective 
side which, for most men, is the only one at present known to them. In that deeper sense, 
Refreshment implies what Spenser speaks of in the lines: 

Sleep after toil, port after stormy seas, 

Ease after war, death after life, doth greatly please . 

To the wise, the' study of the subjective half of life is as important as that of the objective half, and 
without it he cannot make the circle of his self-knowledge complete. Even the observant Masonic 
student is made aware by the formula used at Lodge closing, that by some great Warden of life and 
death each soul is called into this objective world to labour upon itself, and is in due course 
summoned from it to rest from its labours and enter into subjective celestial refreshment, until once 
again it is recalled to labour. For each the "day," the opportunity for' work at self-perfecting, is duly 
given ; for each the "night" cometh when no man can work at that task ; which morning and 
evening constitute but one creative day of the soul's life, each portion of that day being a necessary 
complement to the other . Perfect man has to unify these, opposites in himself ; so that for him, as 
for his Maker, the darkness and the light become both alike . 

The world-old secret teaching upon this subject, common to the whole of the East, to Egypt, the 
Pythagoreans and Platonists, and every College of the Mysteries, is to be found summed up as 
clearly and tersely as one could wish in the Ph edo of Plato, to which the Masonic seeker is referred 
as one of the most instructive of treatises upon the deeper side of the science . It testifies to the great 
rhythm of life and death above spoken of, and demonstrates how that the soul in the course of its 
career weaves and wears out many bodies and is continually migrating between objective and 
subjective conditions, passing from labour to refreshment and back again many times in its great 
task of self-fulfillment. And if Plato was, as was once truly said of him, but Moses speaking Attic 
Greek, we shall not be surprised at finding the same initiate-teaching disclosed in the words of 
Moses himself. Does not the familiar Psalm of Moses declare that man is continually "brought to 
destruction," that subsequently a voice goes forth saying "Come again, ye children of men !" and 
that the subjective spiritual world is his refuge from one objective manifestation to another ? What 
else than a paraphrase of this great word of comfort is the Masonic pronouncement that, in the 



course of its task of self-perfecting, the soul is periodically summoned to alternating periods of 
labour and refreshment ? It must labour, and it must rest from its labours ; its works will follow it, 
and in the subjective world every Brother's soul will receive its due for its work in the objective 
one, until such time as its work is completed and it is "made a pillar in the House of God and no 
more goes out" as a journeyman-builder into this sublunary workshop . "Did I not agree with thee 
for a penny?" said the Great Master parabolically . Now the round disc of the coin was meant to be 
an emblem of that completeness, wholeness, and self-containedness which is denoted by the Circle, 
and which every Mason is enjoined to effect in himself . When the Mason has made the circle of his 
own being complete, he will not only have earned his penny and received his dues; the circle of his 
then glorious being will be as the sun shining in his strength, and he will be able to say with the 
Initiates of Egypt, as they contemplated the sun ascending . from the desert into the heavens : '"I am 
Ra in his rising!" 

THE GRAND LODGE ABOVE 

Express reference is made in the Order rituals to the existence of a Grand Lodge Above, having its 
Grand Master and Officers. Doubtless the allusion is often regarded as but a pious sentiment 
expressing the belief that, after their death, worthy Masons combine to constitute such a Lodge or 
assembly in the heavens. 

With such a belief no one would wish to interfere, but there are good grounds for suggesting that 
the reference was intended to carry a quite different meaning. It is meant to testify to the fact, which 
forms part of the long stream of esoteric tradition throughout the ages, that a supernal Masonic 
Assembly not only exists, ' but that it preceded, in point of time and constitution, the Masonic Order 
on earth. Had it not so existed and preceded the terrestrial Order, that Order itself would not have 
existed ; for the hypothesis is that the latter is the shadow and projection upon the physical world of 
a corresponding hierarchical Order in the superphysical. In other words, the Masonic Order on earth 
is the reflex and effect, not the , generating cause, of the Grand Lodge Above. The latter is not 
necessarily recruited from the former, since death of the body does not constitute per se a title to 
admission to the Grand Lodge Above, which, according to the tradition, possesses its own 
qualifications and passports for admission ; but neither, according to the same tradition, does life in 
the earthly body preclude the duly qualified Mason from reception into, and conscious co-operation 
with, the Supernal Lodge, while he is still in the flesh . 

A certain resemblance will be noticed between this doctrine and the corresponding theological one 
of the complementary relations between the Church Militant on earth and the Church Triumphant in 
the heavens, the doctrine of the Communion possible between all Saints upon whichever side of the 
veil . Neither in the case of the Church nor of Masonry does the claim imply, what is obviously not 
the fact, that every member of either community has actual knowledge or first-hand experience of 
the truth of this doctrine. But it does imply that there have been, and still are, members possessing 
it. 

Larther on in these pages more will be said of the Grand Lodge Above, and in a way which perhaps 
will suggest to the reflective reader a fuller idea than one can convey upon such a subject than by 
expository methods . It is a theme deserving of larger consideration than the Craft accords it, and 
one about which no little literary evidence is available for those with sufficient interest to look for it 
. One such important piece of evidence shall be mentioned here. 

It consists of a remarkable series of communications of the highest spiritual value and 
instructiveness to every Brother seeking to realize the spiritual essence of the Masonic system, 
issued by a saintly man and advanced initiate, Karl von Eckartshausen, to a group of pupils in the 
secret science in Germany, at roughly about the same period as that in which the English Masonic 



Order was becoming established . The synchronism is not without significance and, in conjunction 
with other evidences (which exigencies of space prevent being now adduced) of spiritual activity at 
work at that time behind the events of public history, points to efforts to put forward a great 
movement for human enlightenment ; a movement conceived from behind the veil by the Grand 
Lodge Above, and projected into the world through some of its members in the flesh . 

The communications or letters deal with the subject of the need for human regeneration and the 
rationale of Initiation. In the first of them, the author asserts that "the great and true work of 
building the Temple consists solely in destroying this miserable Adamic hut and in erecting in its 
place a divine temple ; this means, in other words, to develop in us the interior sensorium or the 
organ to receive God. After this process, the metaphysical and incorruptible principle rules over the 
terrestrial, and man begins to live, not any longer in the principle of self-love, but in the spirit and in 
the truth, of which he is the Temple. The most exalted aim of religion is the intimate union of man 
with God ; this union is possible here below, but it can only take place by the opening of our inner 
sensorium, which enables our hearts to become receptive of God. Therein are those great mysteries 
of which human philosophy does not dream, the key to which is not to be found in scholastic 
science ." He then proceeds to state that "a more advanced school has always existed to which the 
deposition of all spiritual science has been confided, which has continued from the first day of 
creation to the present time. Its members are scattered ah over the world, but they have always been 
united by one spirit and one truth . They have had but one science, a single source of truth, one 
Lord, one Doctor, one Master, in whom resides substantially the whole Divine plentitude, who also 
alone initiates them into the high mysteries of Nature and the Spiritual World ." 

In the second letter it is explained (I compress the substance) that : "This community possesses a 
school in which ah who thirst for knowledge are instructed by the Spirit of Wisdom itself, and ah 
the mysteries of God and of Nature are preserved therein for the children of light . It is thence that 
ah truths penetrate into the world. It is the most hidden of communities ; it possesses members 
gathered from many Orders. From all time there has been an exterior school based on this interior 
one, of which it is but the outer expression. The community has been engaged from the earliest ages 
in building the grand Temple for the regeneration of humanity, by which the kingdom of God will 
become manifest. It consists in the communion of those who have most capacity for light. It has 
three Degrees, and these are conferred on suitable candidates still in the flesh. The first is 
inspirationally imparted. The second opens up the human rational intellectuality and understanding, 
and ensures interior illumination . The third and highest is the entire opening of the inner sensorium, 
by which the inner man attains objective vision of real and metaphysical verities ." 

The instruction goes on to explain that this Society does not resemble temporal organizations that 
meet at certain times and elect their own officers. It knows none of these formalities, but proceeds 
in other ways. The Divine Power is always present . The Master of it himself does not invariably 
know ah the members, but the moment a member's presence or services are needed he can be found. 
If a member is called to office, he presents himself among the others without presumption, and is 
received by them without jealousy . If it be necessary that members should meet, they find and 
recognize each other with perfect certainty. No disguise, hypocrisy, or dissimulation, can hide their 
true characteristics . No one member can choose another ; unanimous choice is required. All men 
are called to join this hidden community ; the called may be chosen, if they become ripe for 
entrance . Any one can look for entrance ; any man who is within can teach another to seek it, but 
only he who is ripe can arrive inside. Worldly intelligence seeks this Sanctuary in vain ; ah is 
undecipherable to the unprepared ; he can see nothing, read nothing, in its interior. He who is ripe is 
joined to the chain, perhaps often where he thought least likely, and at a point of which he knew 
nothing himself. Seeking to become ripe should be the effort of him who loves wisdom. But there 
are methods by which ripeness is attained, for in this holy communion is the primitive storehouse of 
the most ancient and original science of the human race, with the primitive mysteries also of ah 



science. It is the unique and illuminated Community which possesses the key to all mystery, which 
knows the centre and source of nature and creation . It unites superior power to its own, and 
includes members from more than one world. It is the Society whose members form a theocratic 
republic, which one day will be the Regent Mother of the whole world. Upon this description of the 
Grand Lodge Above, by one who, even in the days of his flesh, claims to have been a member of it, 
it is not proposed here to descant. That it may provoke surprise and doubt as to its veraciousness in 
those to whom such ideas may now come for the first time, is probable . This must be hazarded in 
giving voice to those ideas here, and the subject left to such responsiveness as may come from the 
heart of the individual reader ; for obviously no proof can either here be offered or given to even the 
most sympathetic querist upon a matter which in its nature is incapable of verification otherwise 
than by direct personal experience. 

But with an earnest counsel to accept its accuracy and to seek confirmation of it in the only way in 
which such confirmation is possible, it must be left to the deep and protracted reflection of those to 
whom the idea of the existence of a Grand Lodge in the heavens, watching over the Masonic Israel 
on earth and superintending its development, is at least a matter of probability and a subject for faith 
. They will at least perceive in the description of it given above, that the Masonic Order faithfully 
reproduces, in point of form and hierarchical progression, its alleged supernal prototype ; and if 
they recognize that invisible things are in some measure knowable by perceiving things that are 
made, the contemplation of their own three-graded Order, with its ascending sequence of Grand 
Lodges of districts, provinces, and finally of the nation, will perhaps help them on to the conception 
of an unseen Grander Lodge beyond all these, -one to membership of which any duly qualified 
Brother may hope to be called to take progressive Initiations no longer ceremonial and symbolic, 
but as facts of spiritual experience-at the hands of the Universal Master and Initiator, whose officers 
are still Brethren of our own, though risen to the stature of holy angels. 



THE MASONIC INITIATION 


FULLNESS OF LIGHT - OBSERVATIONS AND EXAMPLES 

CHAPTER III 

W. L. WILMSHURST 


"The light of the body is the eye . When thine eye is single, 
thy whole body also is full of light . Take heed, therefore, that 
the light in thee be not darkness . " 

—-(Luke xi., 34-5). 


Now will I open unto thee-whose heart 
Rejects not-that last lore, deepest concealed, 

That farthest secret of My heavens and earths, 

Which but to know shall set thee free from ills ; 

A royal lore, a kingly mystery ; 

Yea, for the soul such light as purgeth it 
From every sin ; a light of holiness 
With inmost splendour shining . 

--(The Song Celestial, ix.) . 

We have shown that Initiation, in its real and not merely ceremonial sense, effects in him who 
undergoes it a permanent enlargement of consciousness to a level and of a quality never previously 
known to him. The expansion may be small or great ; indeed the Science contemplates successive 
degrees of Initiation and ever widening expansions to which no limit can be set. 

The reader will ask himself, "What are the nature and characteristics of this new order of 
consciousness when attained? How will it differ from my present normal consciousness?" To 
answering this question the present paper is devoted, and it shall be dealt with first in some general 
observations, and subsequently in a more illustrative manner. 

Even normally, and without deliberately sought Initiation, human consciousness becomes enlarged 
as the result merely of progressive life-experience. For what is life itself but a slow, gradual 
Initiation process, with the world as a Temple in which it is conferred ? The consciousness and 
resultant sagacity of experienced age exceed those of raw youth, even if the change be of an 
intellectual rather than of a spiritual kind, and involve merely increased savoir faire and mundane 
wiliness rather than growth in unworldly wisdom . Still, enlargement has occurred, and it 
adumbrates what is possible with the spiritual consciousness when it becomes awakened. 

Nature, indeed, exhibits nothing but consciousness in process of expansion through her fourfold 
series of kingdoms from the mineral upwards . The outward forms of life, even of the mineral, are 
but the objective bodies of a subjective life-activity resident in that body. The Earth-planet itself, as 
also each of the stellar bodies, is, the Ancients rightly taught, not dead matter, but a Zoon, a living 
Animal, conscious as a whole, conscious (though differingly) in each of its parts however 
materialised or tenuous, and girdled round with a Zodiac of other mutually interacting "living 
creatures," the separate consciousnesses of all the parts of the complex mechanism blending in the 
synthetic Omniscience, God . 


Life is fundamentally one, a unity, though distributed into many separated lives and divided into 
separate self-contained kingdoms, as compartments of a ship are divided by decks and bulkheads . 

It is "an ever-rolling stream," a stream that pours through those kingdoms in a continuous flow 
which is never more than momentarily checked by the forms (or bodies) it flows through, which are 
as it were but little eddies and vortices in the stream; and these forms, from the lowest to the most 
highly evolved, are devised and adjusted to raising consciousness to progressively higher levels. 
Nature, in a word, is a system of restricted consciousness in perishable bodies, leading up to 
unrestricted consciousness in an ultra-natural immortal body. 

Each successive kingdom of Nature assumes into itself the sublimated characteristics of the one 
below it, but becomes endued with an additional principle and takes on a new and appropriate 
bodily form . Thus, as the scale is ascended, the sensitive, the emotional, the intellectual, and the 
spiritual principles are successively added and built into the evolving structure . When the Life- 
essence specialized in the mineral passes on into the vegetable kingdom, it, as it were, takes a 
degree of Initiation; a fresh start is made, a new form or body is given to it as "a mark of its 
progress ." It takes similar and higher grades of initiation, and acquires appropriate new bodies, as it 
passes on to the animal and thence to the human kingdoms. 

It is not here implied that mineral forms directly evolve into vegetable, thence to animal and so on, 
at some point which the biologist has sought for but failed to trace . This is not the case . The 
kingdoms of Nature are closed compartments without intercommunicating doors on the phenomenal 
plane, and do not there change into one another. The transition takes place on a super-physical 
noumenal plane, beyond the range of now current science . 

Man, as at his present evolutional stage, is, in his lower nature, but a summary and synthesis of the 
three sub-human kingdoms ; his embryo recapitulates, and his physique incorporates, the kingdoms 
he has traversed in the long ascent ; but superimposed and dovetailed into it is now an additional, a 
spiritual divine principle, distinguishing and setting him above the lower kingdoms. To them he 
stands as a god ; a high initiate, conscious in a way inconceivable to them. Similarly a plant is a 
god, an initiate, relatively to the soil it grows in ; and an animal a god to the plant . 

Yet in virtue of the new spiritual principle grafted upon his highly evolved bodily structure, man is 
capable of rising to still loftier conscious levels ; he awaits still further initiation . Before him lies 
the prospect of outgrowing the kingdom of merely animal man and of entering the higher one of 
spiritual Man. Four kingdoms-mineral, vegetable, animal human-he has known and built into his 
organism. He has now to rise to a fifth kingdom, that of Spirit, of which already he is a member 
potentially, but without having yet developed and realised his potencies. 

The secret Science therefore shows him a five-pointed Star as an emblem of himself and invests 
him with the five-pointed Apron as a symbol in which he may visualize himself, read his own past, 
and deduce his present possibilities. 

The important fact must be emphasized that, on each transition from a lower to a higher kingdom, 
on each initiation into a new order of life, a death to, a complete break-away from and abandonment 
of, the old form and method of life, is involved . Natural man must, therefore, die to himself, must 
abnegate and put off his old nature, before he can hope to pass into the fifth kingdom as spiritual 
Man . This death, we have shown, is signified by the Masonic Third Degree, which ceremonially 
dramatizes what the individual must pass through before attaining an order of life and 
consciousness he has never before experienced or been able to experience . The death in question is 
not a physical death ; the physical organism is still retained by its former wearer . He has merely 
effaced and died to his old self and its natural tendencies, and suffered them to become superseded 
by a new self, functioning not from his former constricted mind, but from a new centre of 



illimitable conscious capacity ; a capacity not displaced by the resumed use of his physical body for 
the residue of its natural duration, but one that enables him thenceforward to use that body as a 
much more effective instrument for furthering the cosmic purpose . 

How is that newly- won consciousness to be described ? It is, of course, indescribable. As sight is 
indescribable to the man born blind, as consciousness in this world would be unexplainable to the 
unborn babe, so that of the Initiate is incapable of description to those as yet unborn in the kingdom 
of Spirit. To be known it must be experienced . It belongs to the Greater Mysteries which always 
remain ineffable and incommunicable, whatever instruction may be imparted about the Lesser ones 
. Yet something may be said about it to help the imagination. 

In my former volume it was explained that the moment of restoration to light in the Third Degree, 
and also the corresponding moment in the Royal Arch Degree, are both of them attempts-the former 
a simple, the latter a more elaborate one-to dramatize the enlarged conscious state into which the 
candidate passes in actual Initiation . A very fine and wonderful literary description of expanded 
consciousness effected by Initiation is to be found in the eleventh section of the great Indian manual 
of initiation-science, the Bhagavad Gita (most accessible to English readers in Sir Edwin Arnold's 
fine poetic translation, The Song Celestial) . Dante's vision in the Paradiso is an example, as also 
that recorded in the biblical book of Revelation by the seer who was "in the spirit in the Lord's day." 
Keats imagined it accurately when, in Hyperion, he wrote of it : 

Knowledge enormous makes a god of me . 

Names, deeds, grey legends, dire events, rebellions, 

Majesties, sovran voices, agonies, 

Creations and destroyings,-all, at once, 

Pour into the wide hollows of my brain 

And deify me ; as if some blithe wine, 

A bright elixir peerless, I had drunk 

And so become immortal . 

A large collection of evidence and records of. personal experiences has been brought together in 
recent years testifying to the fact of such conscious expansions . One such compilation is that 
entitled Cosmic Consciousness, by Dr. R. M . Bucke, a member of the Craft in America and an 
exponent of the mystical nature of Masonry . The subject has even been investigated experimentally 
by the late eminent psychologist Professor William James and others, and although such artificially 
induced heightenings of consciousness are strongly to be dissuaded from as perilous to those who 
undertake them-and Professor James confessed that to himself it brought with it a painful reaction 
and penalty-he has left an able, vivid description of what is known as "the Anaesthetic Revelation" 
which may be quoted ; it could not better have expressed the truth had it been written by one who 
had attained Initiation legitimately and in the natural development of the life of sanctity and 
contemplation, instead of by one who was merely intoxicating himself with nitrous oxide gas . He 
writes : 


"In this intense metaphysical illumination, Truth lies open to the view in depth beneath depth of 
almost blinding evidence . The mind sees all the logical relations of being with an apparent subtlety 



and instantaneity to which its normal consciousness offers no parallel . The centre and periphery of 
things seem to come together . The Ego and its objects, the meum and the tuum, are one. Its first 
result was to make peal through me with unutterable power the conviction that the deepest 
convictions of my intellect hitherto were wrong . Whatever idea or representation occurred to the 
mind was seized by the same logical forceps and served to illustrate the same truth ; and that truth 
was that every opposition, among whatsoever things, vanishes in a higher unity in which it is based 
; that all contradictions, so called, are but differences ; that all differences are of degree ; that all 
degrees are of a common kind ; that unbroken continuity is the essence of being ; and that we are 
literally in the midst of an Infinite. It is impossible to convey an idea of the torrential character of 
the identification of opposites as it streams through the mind in this experience." 

—(The Will to Believe, by W. James, p . 294) . 

With this statement let us compare one by a real Initiate describing the opening up of the Light at 
his centre : 

"My whole spirit seemed to break through the gates of hell and be taken up into the arms and heart 
of God . I can compare it to nothing but the resurrection at the last day . For then, with all reverence 
I say it, with the eyes of my spirit I saw God. I saw both what God is, and how God is what He is . 
The gate of the Divine Mystery was sometimes so opened in me that in one quarter of an hour I saw 
and knew more than if I had been many years at a university . I saw and knew the Being of all 
Beings ; the Byss and the Abyss ; the generation of the Son and the procession of the Spirit . I saw 
the descent and original of this world also, and of all its creatures . I saw in their order and outcome 
the Divine World, the Angelical World, Paradise, and then this fallen dark world of our own . I saw 
the beginning of the good and of the evil, the true origin and existence of each of them . For twelve 
years this went on in me . Sometimes the truth would hit me l ik e a sudden smiting storm of rain, 
and then there would be the clear sunshine after the rain ." 

The writer of this statement was the poor, uneducated cobbler, Jacob Boehme, who lived near 
Dresden, and died, aged 49, in 1624, and who has been described by a disciple and competent 
judge - Louis Claude de Saint Martin ("Le Philosophe Inconnu") ; himself a Freemason and 
advanced illuminate - as "the greatest light that has come into the world since Him who was 
Himself the Light of the world." The fuller record of his illuminations and profound metaphysical 
insight can be found in his series of lengthy but difficult and obscure works, from the study of 
which Sir Isaac Newton, a deep student of them, drew the information from which he became able 
to formulate the principles of gravitation and planetary motion, and other laws now known to 
regulate physical phenomena . 

Instances might be multiplied indefinitely of cases in which the inner being of persons ripening for 
Initiation expands towards all sides from an infinitely deep central point in themselves, so that they 
acquire a totally different outlook upon life, a larger deeper envisaging of the world, than others . 
Three outstanding features characterize such cases . First, the fact that objects, whether those of 
nature or one's fellow beings, cease to be seen singly, as separate objects and beings, but as partial 
expressions of a single, sublying, inexpressible unity . Second, the fact that for such percipients all 
ordinary values become changed ; what the average man supposes important shrinks to 
worthlessness, and what he thinks negligible assumes prime importance . Third, the fact that the 
five senses, distributed in the ordinary man as distinct, unrelated channels of perception, remain no 
longer separate and diffused, but become unified and co-functional in one comprehensive faculty, 
so that to see is also to hear; to touch, even with blindfold eyes, is to visualize . As a Brother in the 
Craft, known to me, writes of his own experience of this enrichment of consciousness : "You know 
everything and understand the stars and the hills and the old songs . They are all within you, and 
you are all light . But the light is music, and the music is violet wine in a great cup of gold, and the 
wine in the golden cup is the scent of a June night ." 



The brilliant young German, Novalis, an advanced illuminate, though he died at 29 over a century 
ago, tells of his Master, Werner (a professor of mineralogy at Freyburg), as one who "was aware of 
the inter-relation of all things, of conjunctions, coincidences . He saw nothing singly . The 
perceptions of his senses thronged together ; he heard, saw, felt, simultaneously. Sometimes the 
stars became man to him, men as stars ; stones as animals, clouds as plants . He sported with forces 
and phenomena. He knew where and how to find and bring to light this or that. What came to him 
more than this he does not tell us. But he tells us that we ourselves, led on by him and by our own 
desire, may discover what happened to him ." 

"Led on by our own desire." In desire lies the secret of it all ! All Initiation presupposes , 
concentration and intensity of desire for it, and is impossible without that indispensable prerequisite 
. Desire turned outward, squandered upon exterior attractions, wastes the soul's forces, distributes 
its energies through the five channels of sense . Turned inward, focused upon interior possibilities, 
desire ingathers those forces, unifies those senses, and is the heat which, gathering in intensity, 
finds its ultimate fruition in a burst of conscious flame . "If thine eye be single thy whole body is 
full of light ." 

Here is an example . In a small lone isle of the Hebrides lived a young fisherman-crofter, one of the 
few natives of a place necessarily poor and with such scanty social and educational advantages that 
a mind of any power and depth is thrown back upon itself ; a place where almost the only book is 
that of Nature, the only place of worship the Temple of earth and sky and sea. Such conditions, 
however, uninviting to most people, are particularly favourable to self-realisation and initiation; 
since they ensure that poverty, that simplicity and unsophistication of the mind which are so 
difficult to acquire in crowded places and amid the tyrannies, artificialities and strife of current so- 
called civilization . So they were to the man in question. With something of the old primitive 
passion of Demeter- worship, he loved the island and the sea, his soul straining continually to know 
directly and at first hand the Living Beauty which he knew resided beneath its manifested veil . One 
golden day, in a moment of concentrated adoring contemplation, he threw himself on the ground, 
kissing the hot, sweet heather, plunging his hands and arms in it, sobbing the while with a vague 
strange yearning, and lying there nerveless, with closed eyes . His posture at that moment 
resembled, unwittingly yet surely, that of one who with blinded eyes and with his hands upon the 
Sacred Law declares that the supreme Light is the paramount desire of his heart and asks to be 
accorded it. And then came the moment when his longing was satisfied, when the veil was torn 
from his eyes and he received his initiation into light . 

Suddenly-for, whatever its nature to the cold-blooded inquisition of the scientist, thus he translated 
the psychopathic experience he then under went two little hands rose up through the spires of 
heather and anointed his forehead and eyes with something soft and fragrant . 

Thereafter he was the same, yet not the same, man; the place he lived in was the old familiar place, 
yet had become new, glorified. The Eternal Beauty had entered into him, and nothing that others 
saw as ugly or dreary was otherwise than perpetually invested with it . Waste, desolate spots 
became to him passing fair, radiant with lovely light. When, later, he went away to great towns and 
passed among their squ2dor and sordid hideousness, amid slims, factory smoke and grime, he saw 
all that others see, yet only as vanishing shadows, beneath which everything and everyone was 
lovely, beautiful with strange glory, and the faces of men and women sweet and pure, and their 
souls white. 

Such was this man's involuntary Initiation unsought, or rather not knowingly sought, yet bringing 
him the fruits of the travail of his soul and leaving him permanently enlightened and transformed. 
(The incident is referred to in the works of the late Fiona Ma) He came to be known among those 
with whom he dwelt as "the Anointed Man." In their Greek original the words "Christ" and 



"Christian " bore just that significance- an anointed, "baptized," for initiated man. Actual Initiation, 
then, regarded, as it may be, as "baptism," is of two classes, a lesser and a greater. The lesser 
(scripturally described as the /'baptism of water") .is one affecting the lower nature, the mind, the 
intelligence, the psychic nature and sensibilities. The mentality becomes expanded and illuminated ; 
there is a quickening and hyperaesthesia of the senses, a growth of psychic faculty and perception ; 
for the soul ( or psyche ) is now beginning to exercise its hitherto dormant atrophied powers. 

The greater form of Initiation, the "baptism of fire," is the awakening of the Spirit, the innermost 
essence, the "Vital and Immortal Principle" centrally resident in the soul, as the soul is resident in 
the sense-body. Numbers of people attain the lesser baptism in the ordinary development of life and 
often without awareness of the fact. The greater baptism is of rarer occurrence, and to experience it 
is a crisis that cannot be mistaken, or pass unnoticed or forgotten. 

To attain either form, Initiation of a formal character is not an indispensable requirement, for the 
growth of the soul, and Divine dealings with the soul, are not dependent upon human formalities. 
But formal Initiation has always been, and is to-day, an opportunity and means of grace for 
attaining interior advancement which otherwise might not be secured and, for this reason, the 
Masonic Initiation, though only a ceremonial one at present, assumes so great an importance and is 
capable of being put to uses so much higher and farther-reaching than the Craft has hitherto 
dreamed of. 

Life itself, we repeat, serves for thousands as an initiating-process, without any supplementary 
formality .Numbers of people attain in less or greater measure the lesser baptism of water in the 
expanded consciousness associated with the poetic, artistic, musical or mystical types ;-our 
Wordsworths, Shelleys, Tennysons and the like" are natural initiates in whose lives formal initiation 
has played no part, and numberless unknown people exist about us who, in silence and obscurity , 
have developed their deeper nature and could assert of themselves :- 

We have built a house that is not for Time's o'er-throwing, 

We have gained a peace unshaken by pain for ever. 

Many there are who are conscious of the "mystic tie" that binds not merely all men into brotherhood 
.but all the elements of the Universe into unity ; who have lost the sense of separateness and divided 
interests that characterizes the average sensual man whose consciousness and desires extend no 
farther than his own carnal affections ; who" still incarcerated in the mortal body can evade its 
prison-walls and laugh at its iron window-bars, escaping into the world of soul, exploring its 
wonders, mingling in conscious communion with other similarly liberated souls, 

and there 

Spend in pure converse their eternal day 
Think each in each, immediately wise, 

Learn all they lacked before; hear, know, and say 
What this tumultuous body now denies; 

And feel, who- have laid their groping hands away; 


And see, no longer blinded by their eyes. 



—(Rupert Brook). 


But those who know the "baptism of fire," the Initiation of, and into, central Spirit, are few . To help 
to a conception of such cases one may refer to recorded instances where, so fully has the Blazing 
Star at the human centre opened itself, so habitually has its fire been brought forward into the 
purified carnal body and its formal mind, that that Light has become palpably visible, and not 
merely as a flesh transmuting grace, beautifying and glorifying the personality, but as a radiant aura 
issuing from the face and person and throwing off actual quasi-physical light . The traditional 
portrayal of saints and angels, surrounded by aureoles, haloes and garments of flame, testifies to this 
advanced condition. Of such Initiates as Columba and Ruysbroeck it is credibly recorded that their 
persons were seen bathed in self-radiated luminosity that lit up their chambers or the space around 
them for a wide radius. If the Central Light can so be objectified, it may be left to the imagination to 
surmise the intensity and range of the subjective consciousness experienced by those in whom it so 
burns. Such cases of "fullness of light" exemplify what is typified by the completed Temple of 
Solomon, into which descended the Divine Presence, flooding the whole house with its glory (2 
Chron. vii, 1 -3). 

And now, leaving these general considerations, let us pass on to an imaginative illustration of the 
way in which Light in its fullness may be known and-God willing and helping-induced, by methods 
of actual, as distinct from ceremonial, Initiation. 

APOCALYPSIS- AN ALLEGORY OF INITIATION 

"At the time of the end shall be vision. '. 

--(Dan. viii, 17) . 

"O truly sacred Mysteries! 0 pure Light! I am led by the 
light of the torch to the view of heaven and of God. I am made 
whole by Initiation. The Lord Himself is the hierophant who, 
leading the candidate for initiation to the Light, sends him and 
presents him to the Father to be preserx’edfor ever. These 
are the orgies of my Mysteries. If thou wilt, come and be thou 
also initiated, and thou shalt join in the dance with the angels 
around the uncreated, imperishable, only true God, the Word 
of God joining in the strain !" 

--(Clemens Alexandrinus) . 

"APOCALYPSIS " is a Greek word meaning an unclothing, a tearing away of the veils obstructing 
our perception of Absolute Truth. Hence our biblical word "Revelation" or " Apocalypse." The 
Initiate- Apostle Paul speaks of attaining the lofty condition of beholding the Divine Glory with 
unveiled face, reflecting it as a mirror, and becoming transformed into it in ever increasing measure 
(2 Cor. iii, 18). 

Whoever would thus behold and reflect naked, unveiled, living Truth, must himself stand forth in 
his own naked spirit, stripped of all obscuring veils of sense, emotion, desire, thought. He must be, 
as the biblical Apocalyptist puts it, "in the spirit" in the Lord's day,"_"day" implying consciousness 
in the spirit (the "lord") as "night" implies the inevitable benightedness of any lower form of 
conscious faculty (the "servant"). 

In the Ancient Mysteries this power of spiritual perception was called Epopteia, and the seers 
possessing it were termed Epopts. This fulness of light, this direct confrontation of the naked human 



spirit with the unveiled universal Holy Spirit, was attained only by high Initiates ; it was the 
ultimate ripened fruit of Initiation . "If thine eye be single, thy whole body shall be full of light . 


What now follows is a descriptive example of the path leading to that attainment, for I desire to 
convey to my Brethren, however feebly, an idea of what real, as distinct from merely ceremonial, 
Initiation involves and leads to, and in no other way can I do it. 

Greatly daring, therefore, I am venturing to follow-at whatever distance-the example of the Initiate 
poet, Virgil, in the sixth Aeneid, where, in veiled teiuls, is portrayed the quest of the human soul for 
its "Father" or Divine Paternal Principle, as that quest is there shown pursued from this dark earthly 
cave into the bright Elysian Fields of the Universal Spirit ; and also the similar, though differently 
expressed, examples of Initiation and Epopteia provided for us in the biblical book of Revelation, 
and by Wolfram von Eschenbach and Richard Wagner in Parsifal. 

Although written in the first person, I beg that my description will be construed impersonally as 
regards the writer . But it is also hoped that the reader will earnestly look forward to some such 
experience becoming one day true of himself ; not necessarily in precisely this form, but in its 
essential characteristics ; for the Spirit bloweth where and how it listeth, and those who are taught 
of it may receive their lesson in differing ways, yet with uniformity of result . 

How far that which follows is allegory, how far it is the work of a constructive imagination building 
upon pre-acquired knowledge, how far it voices personal intuition and spiritual experience, need not 
be indicated ; it contains elements of each . All that matters is that it should faithfully illustrate truth 
; and those who have followed me so far and found any echoes of verity in earlier pages, will not 
regard me as wishing at this final stage to speak to them otherwise than with the tongue of good 
report and golden truth, and in terms and tones of uttermost sincerity. Whether what now is written 
voices truth, let him that hath understanding and inward hearing, hear and judge . 

I. 

Being of an inquiring disposition, hearing that in the Brotherhood called Masonic there were to be 
known certain valuable arcana and secrets of life not learnable elsewhere, and imagining it to be 
desirable from other motives which, whilst not mercenary, were perhaps of little better character, I 
followed a fashion of the time and the example of some friends, and associated myself with a 
community from which I looked to become possessed of some special but undefined wisdom within 
a brief space of time. 

Looking back now across the years, my conduct at that time strikes me as not a little unworthy. I 
was looking for something for nothing . I was expecting to acquire valuable knowledge without 
paying or working for it ; to get without giving . Nor had I considered to what use I should put the 
acquisition when I had secured it . But I was young, inexperienced, unreflecting, and knew no better 


My presumption soon received its appropriate penalty, for on being formally and with a most 
cordial welcome received into the community and solemnly undertaking to conform to its 
regulations, I was promptly cornered and humiliated . Instead of being given what my rashness had 
expected, I was asked what I was prepared to give for the benefit of any of the brotherhood who 
might need it . I felt trapped, but it would have been impolite to say so . It was as obvious to them 
as it was painfully conscious to myself that my financial and intellectual poverty was such that I had 
nothing whatever to give . I was impelled, however, to mutter the perhaps scarcely sincere reply 
that had I been a person of any means I would have gladly contributed accordingly ; an answer 
which, to my surprise, satisfied them, and they generously proceeded to tell me that, though I could 



offer them nothing, they would proceed to give me something, but upon .the understanding that if I 
ever met anyone as poor as myself I must remember the present occasion, be as good as my word, 
and treat him liberally . The incident impressed me, and is of importance in view of later 
developments ; for I am now trying to fulfil that old promise. 

In my novel, flurried position, I had but a hazy notion of what then occurred or of what they gave 
me. I remember some talk about a stone, a foundation- stone, and of identifying myself with that 
stone and putting it to some good use or other. I did not recall any stone changing hands or passing 
into my possession ; but then, if I were already identified with it, it would not change hands ; I 
already possessed it and was merely made aware of something of which I was previously 
unconscious. 

Be that as it may, on returning home I found myself in possession of a small stone which I valued as 
a memorial of the occasion and as a token that I was now a member of the community of which I 
had heard so much and had been so eager to join . My fellow-members also, I found, each 
possessed a similar stone and were all very proud of it. It served as a passport or means of 
introduction when they travelled for pleasure or business . Some of them wore it openly as a 
pendant to their watch-chains or had it set in a ring with a square and compasses engraved upon it, 
or mounted as an ornament for their wives . Personally I preferred not to advertise the possession of 
my own stone and kept it in my pocket . 

For years I carried it about with me and went my usual way in the world and attended to ordinary 
business . I continued to attend meetings of the community and to enjoy the company and 
conviviality I there met . So seductive were these that for long I did not realize that I was learning 
nothing of any vital use, and that the wisdom I had hoped to learn never reached me . Moreover, I 
did all that seemed required of me in the way of learning the work of the Society and discharging 
any task that was given me, yet in no way was I any different or better a man for belonging to it 
than I might have remained had I never entered it . No knowledge of any value, no secrets or 
mysteries of any moment, ever reached me, or seemed to be possessed by my fellows . Perhaps after 
all there were none to impart, or if there were, they did not matter . 

The position, after reflection, began to feel a little Apocalypsis absurd. I thought of ways of 
relieving myself of it, by resignation or discontinuing my interest in the Craft, especially as no one I 
consulted was able to throw me any light upon the reason of its existence . Once, whilst so 
brooding, I took the little stone from my pocket and slowly turned it over and over, my memory 
wandering back to the moment when I had received it. I said to myself "I have been expecting 
bread, and been given a stone-this stone ." Somehow it seemed to have increased somewhat in size, 
to have become unaccountably heavier . And then, as I scrutinised it, I detected for the first time 
some minute markings upon it, too small to decipher without the aid of a magnifying glass . 
Applying such a glass I found inscribed upon the stone the minute words "Free and Accepted 
Masonry"; then the Latin words "Descendit e coelo,"-it comes from heaven ; and finally, in Greek 
lettering, ' the words "Know thyself!" (The quoted words are inscribed on the Foundation stone of 
Freemasons' Hall, -London, laid on May-day ,1775 .) 

I pondered much upon these words and tried to realize their significance, though to little purpose . I 
made it in my way to see some of my Brethren and sought permission to examine their stones . To 
my surprise .in each case I found the same inscription, though they themselves had not discerned it. 
It was often very faint and in some cases nearly worn away, but there on every stone it was . I 
pointed it out to some of them. They were momentarily interested, but then fell to talking of other 
things and thought no more about it . One or two seniors, of high rank and many decorations, grew 
almost angry at the suggestion that their stone exhibited anything with which they were not already 



fully conversant ; so with them I did not press the matter. No one that I interrogated could give me 
any helpful explanation . 


I was referred to libraries and given the loan of historical and archmo logical books . I visited the 
headquarters of the community and there interviewed antiquaries and other learned and dignified 
people, but though for some years I strove diligently to trace the meaning, nothing of real value was 
forthcoming . 

Meanwhile my stone grew gradually larger, heavier ; and, as it did so, its inscription became 
correspondingly more visible and as if demanding more and more insistently to be read and 
understood . In a twofold sense it weighed upon me ; its physical weight was becoming a burden, its 
unsolved problem an oppression to my mind. How could I get rid of it? 

I happen to have a good friend or brother to whom, in emergencies, I have learned to repair for 
guidance . I don't know who he is, but he is extremely reliable, and though not very communicative 
and apt to be slow, even sullen, in his replies, and then to answer me in riddles and indirect ways, he 
has never once misled me. Like my puzzling stone, he too, seems somehow to be indentified with 
myself . A medical man or psychologist would say, of course, that he was my own subliminal or 
supraliminal consciousness. It matters not which . I only know that he is intimately associated with 
me, that he has an extraordinary intuitive knowledge of myself and my personal problems, and can 
settle for me matters Apocalypsis which my brain and reason do not and cannot. I have come to call 
him, as I find Oriental psychologists do, the Teacher or Master in the heart . 

To him I referred the matter and sought his guidance. For a long time there was no answer. I tried 
again and again, and eventually, as my anxiety increased, his aloofness and silence diminished 
somewhat. But, as usual, his responses were disconnected and enigmatic ; mere hints rather than 
explanations ; as though he wished the onus of finding what I sought to know to remain with myself 
and that I must worry out my own solution with a minimum of help . Piecing together his 
fragmentary replies, they may be translated and condensed thus: 

"You cannot cast away your stone . It is yourself. You cannot evade it and its responsibilities by 
resigning or remaining absent from the Brotherhood in which you first acquired the stone . Once a 
Mason, always a Mason : in this world and in worlds to come. You stand solemnly and eternally 
covenanted, not only to yourself and your Brotherhood, but to the Eternal Sacred Law, to proceed 
with your Masonic work to the end. That Law does not permit you . to stultify an obligation 
deliberately made upon It, even if made ignorantly. Ignorantia Legis neminem excusat. There may 
be that in you which was not ignorant, and that guided you to undertake that obligation. Descendit e 
ccElo . Know thyself ! " 

Brooding upon this I realized in my conscience the force and truth of the advice, and that the stone 
and myself were now more closely identified than ever . It was the inseparable symbol of myself. It 
was my "stone of destiny," l ik e the Kaabah or -sacred Cubical Stone of the Moslems at Mecca; l ik e 
the Lia Lail in Westminster Abbey upon which Jacob is said to have slept and kings are crowned ; 
both of them stones, moreover, about which the legend runs that they "descended from heaven ." 
Curious that that legend should now coincide with the inscription on my own stone ! Yet what have 
Jacob and coronations to do with me, or I with them? "Know thyself!" Yes, indeed ; for assuredly 
there may be unplumbed depths and unreached heights of me that my conscious mind does not yet 
know. But how to reach and investigate them? How is it possible to know more of myself than I do 
already ?-that was my problem . 



Thus, baffled, I put the matter by for a while, or rather tried to, but it would not permit itself long to 
be ignored. The stone continued so to grow in bulk and weight as to become well nigh as unportable 
as its meaning grew increasingly intractable. 

Ultimately, one day, in despair, I carried it out into a lonely moorland wilderness with the intention 
of finally grappling with its mystery and unravelling it once and for all, or of leaving it there-if I 
could . As I went I remembered Bunyan's Pilgrim, carrying on his back the intolerable pack which 
fell away of itself when he reached the top of a certain hill. I half hoped similar relief might befall 
myself, but did not expect it. I had again earnestly appealed to my inward monitorial friend for 
further succour; but this time he had not answered at all . 

Weary in body, distraught in mind, I bore my burden, now grown to a weight I could barely carry 
and finally pitched it down among the ling and Apocalypsis bracken of the heath, and in the evening 
dusk flung myself down to rest, and upon the stone-my stone of destiny-pillowed my head, and 
from exhaustion fell asleep . 

II. 

I slept, but my heart waked . Though asleep I did not wholly lose consciousness, but retained a 
pleasurable feel of knowing I was asleep, that my fatigued body and brain were at rest, and myself, 
my released and quickened intellect, was free to act in independence of them. Oh, the rest and 
blissfulness of that conscious sleep [-paradoxical as it may sound . 

Though I knew my tired head and harried brain rested upon the hard stone, that hardness presently 
seemed to be dissolving and the pillow to become one of the softest down, swathed in fine linen, 
most white, most cool, lavender- scented . Yes, and more ; it became vibrant ; intensely, healingly 
vibrant . Sweet scents exhaled from it ; but also sound ;- oh [-gorgeous strains matching the delicate 
fragrance, welling sweetly, softly, from afar; the twaira perfectly concordant ; unisoned rather ; 
odour melodious, incense musical ! 

Presently, in this intensifying joy, my eyes opened . It was no longer dusk. Soft golden light was 
everywhere, through which pulsed now and again, like summer lightning, throbs of rosy and other 
coloured rays of more than rainbow purity, whilst the ground about me, upon which I lay, was no 
longer the rough moorland, but fleecy down of most restful violet hue, as though one had passed 
through the dark-blue vault of the night-sky and lay upon the sunlit upper side of it . 

I raised myself and looked round . Standing near me I saw one whom, instantly and instinctively, I 
recognized as my hitherto unseen friend and brother, the concealed interior monitor, to whom I had 
previously addressed my appeals for counsel . What a mighty, glorious being he was as he stood 
there, a dazzle of flame-like hair circling his fine head, his feet also winged with wreathing 
harmless fire ; his person white-robed with a garment that seemed, not put on, but to grow from and 
be an integral part of him, and about his neck and loins the shimmering blue and gold clothing of-to 
my amazement-a Grand Lodge Officer . In one hand he bore a tall crystal wand l ik e a deacon's, and 
his other arm held a golden thyrsos or caduceus . 

We both smiled a recognition when our eyes met . I discerned that he was waiting there till I was 
sufficiently rested. 

"Where are we ?" I asked. 


In the Aula Latomorum ! 



"Freemasons' Hall! "-my thought translated his words, and then as swiftly ran on by habit ; "Great 
Queen Street, London,W .C.2 . But surely not there!" And I saw that his mind read mine though I 
spoke not. 

"No, not there. That is far below you now ; far removed, yet not so much by distance as by 
difference of conscious state ." 

"Then where am I?" 

"In the candidate's preparing-room of the Aula Latomorum ; the Supreme Universal Lodge of all 
Builders in the Spirit ; what you have heard of as TheGrand Lodge Above." 

I began to protest that I was unfitted for, and had no title to admission to, such a place, but he 
checked me, saying :-"You have sought, asked, knocked, though you did not know it. That forms 
your title to admission. Your search for wisdom, your continued askings for light, did not pass 
unobserved by the Eye that watches here, that never slumbers nor sleeps. Your blind strivings after 
truth were heard as knocks upon our door, and for you that door will now open. You are being 
awaited within. Come, we will enter the Lodge !" And he placed a gentle but powerful arm around 
me. 


I still hesitated, but the bracing vitality of his presence and touch counteracted my weakness and 
gave me tenseness and courage. Nevertheless, as we began to move away, I turned and looked back 
upon my sleeping body in the gloom at my feet, with its head couched upon the rude dark stone, - 
the poor, poor rags of myself. From it, linking me with it, I saw issuing a slender silvery streak, a 
phosphorescent filament faintly visible against its violet background. 

"That," said my guide, "is your cable-tow, by which you shall be restored later on to the blessing of 
your material comforts :-if, indeed, comforts they be to you," he added with a laugh. "They are a 
blessing, nevertheless, for without them you could never have reached or entered here. Now come 
!" "What is that glorious music ?" I asked, as we passed up a great stairway, the steps of which his 
fire-winged feet scarcely touched. For its tones grew louder, richer, as we ascended, and its waves 
rolled out upon me l ik e ocean billows . 

"Pending your arrival, the Grand Organist is playing selections from the Music of the Spheres for 
the healing of your bruised spirit . The fragrant music your stone pillow echoed back to you just 
now was its overtones . This Fodge, the heavens, yes, and the earth beneath, are all built and held 
together by that music, though few of you in the world below have ears to hear it ." 

So we passed on. 

III. 

We reached the first landing of the vast Hall. It was quadrangular, and flanked at each side by a 
corridor by which one could perambulate the building . My guide conducted me along the four sides 


"This," he told me, "is the floor upon which labour all Architects in the Spirit under the guidance of 
the Universal Great Architect . There are two higher floors ; one for the Geometrician who issue the 
designs for the Architects to fabricate into shape ; upon the other labour those still greater souls who 
are in the secret counsels of the Most High and dwell within His shadow ." 



We reached the portal of a central hall, the Lodgeroom of the great Apprentice Architects . - 
Without it stood a great being bearing a sword that flashed every way, but observing my clothing 
and condition, he let it fall and asked in whose name I sought admission . And with a ringing voice, 
l ik e a silver trumpet, my guide replied for me 

"In the name of the Son of the Carpenter, the Apocalypsis Grand Carpenter of the Universe of 
worlds and men, by whom all things are made!" 

And, as the great gates opened, from within, upon rolling waves of sound, welled forth the antiphon 
"Hallowed be that name to everlasting . His kingdom come, without as here within!" 

So we entered . 

I may not tell all that I saw or that occurred in that wondrous place, that great assembly . But this I 
will tell, that at one place I found myself before two interlaced triangles of lighted candles, three of 
which were lesser and three were greater lights, and at their centre, making seven, stood still 
another light, the greatest of them all and of brilliance so intolerable that I was constrained to fall 
upon my knees before the candlesticks and shield my eyes from their light with both my hands. 

Thus kneeling, self-blinded, words were spoken to me that can never be repeated but that seemed to 
proceed from the central great candle. And presently I was asked if, voluntarily and of my own free 
will, I would enter into a great and solemn covenant with the Voice speaking from it, which 
covenant would not be formulated for me but, as a test of my sincerity and desire, must come as the 
spontaneous prompting of my own heart . And then, in my ignorance, simplicity and blindness, but 
under my compelling joy at the wonders that even so far I had witnessed, I behaved as a child who 
has been shown some new thing that delights it and forthwith must needs run away to tell the 
tidings to its friends. And I exclaimed that thenceforward never' would I conceal from anyone in the 
world the 

Fullness unimaginable splendours that lay so near it yet of passed unperceived, but that on the 
contrary I Light would reveal them to all men and as far as possible make everyone know about 
them, and that of the light and bliss in which I stood bathed I would carry back so much into the 
dark world that no one should fail to see it, and that if needs be I would be content to be ground to 
dust and cast far and wide in sparklets of powdered light, if by so doing that light might be more 
widely diffused . 

Whilst I still spoke my hands were drawn from my eyes by another hand, which then took one of 
mine, and the Voice said :- M Rise, brother with the child's heart ; of such is this kingdom. Be thou 
my candlebearer, and let there be Light!" 

I was raised from my knees, but, rising, my mind seemed to rise in correspondence, to widen out 
enormously in its perceptions and conceptions as the result of something that thrilled into me from 
the touch of that hand. All I had before seen and understood seemed but as darkness to what I now 
saw, and I, who in my impulsive ignorance had said I would become the light of the world, now 
beheld the great central candle-light of the seven to be no longer a candle, but to be He who Himself 
bears that name. 

"Domine, non sum dignus !" Again I would have fallen to my knees, but the Great Benignity, the 
Hierophant who walked among the candlesticks, restrained me and, for my support, drew a garment 
as it were of pure white lamb-skin from the substance of His own person, in which garment and 
flesh were one, and girded it about my loins as an apron, saying: 



"This is My Body, given for you, that your body Apocalypsis may be given for Me." And again 
waves of coloured sound poured over me from choired voices singing "Ecce Agnus Dei, qui tollit 
peccata mundi ! " 

And a great strength passed into me, so that all weakness fled and I stood erect before Him, an 
accepted Apprentice Mason of the Grand Lodge Above. 

Then gathering into His hand the three lesser lights, they blended there into one another and became 
one light, one candle, which He placed in my hand, bidding me light my way with it until such time 
as I came to the measure of perfect man and the high stature of a Master Mason, and thereafter to go 
forth with it to them that sit in darkness and the shadow of death. 

When, amid swelling music, my guide led me forth from that great hall, its vast assembly rose to 
salute their new brother, passing before them, bearing his lighted candle. And thereafter I was free 
to enter their abodes and workshops where I was shown the work and the methods of those who are 
indeed the constructive builders and carpenters of everything in the world of manifested form, 
fromthe fabrication of a solar system to that of the bodily organisms of all that inhabits it, from the 
building of a planet to the manufacture of the simplest mechanism of human invention ; for what is 
such an "invention" but a discovery, a finding out, and "coming upon" by the human mind of 
something of which the pattern already exists upon an, at present, concealed ultra-human level ? 
Here were visible and exposed the secrets and mysteries in regard to all created forms and physical 
phenomena. Here the forces constituting natural law were controlled and regulated ; here 
continents, oceans and waterways were planned .and human racial distribution pre-arranged. In this 
department worked those who devised the constitution of states, kingdoms and polities for the lower 
world ; in that, those who compiled tables and codes of law for social use and government, plans of 
ethical systems, religious, ceremonial and sacramental forms for human use and educating human 
understanding in celestial truths. And among these latter were to be seen the originals of the great 
systems of ritual and symbolism devised to train the human eye and imagination to the perception 
of spiritual principles to which otherwise they would remain blind-such as those of the Hebrew and 
the older Christian Churches, the ancient schools of the Mysteries, and also modern Freemasonry , 
the source of which, so nebulous and uncertain to terrestrial research, here becomes crystal-clear. 
For all such institutions exist in the outer world, not from chance compilation or unaided human 
ingenuity, but because. they are "patterns of heavenly things," physicalised reflections of pre-exsting 
fabrications by Architects and Workmen labouring Upon a loftier and more enlightened plane of 
being than that of the flesh, a plane from which they become inspirationally transmitted to the 
minds of those below or to which some such minds are able consciously to mount and receive direct 
instruction ; as did the Hebrew Initiate, Moses, when enjoined to frame the religio-political system 
of his people and in doing so to "see that he did all things in accordance with the pattern shown him 
in the Apocalypsis Mount." 

For in this celestial "Mount" are made all the patterns or models of whatever is good, useful and 
worthy in the terrestrial "valley" below, where nothing is really made, but merely copied and 
reproduced. From here the prophet, the poet, the artist, the musical genius, the inventor, wittingly or 
unwittingly draw all the conceptions that become the heritage of man and help on his racial career, 
but that at the same time convey to him an illusory sense of self-generated progress and a belief in 
his own cleverness . 

Thus was I made free of the great brotherhood of the Supernal Architects, working without haste, 
without rest, in the world of Light. Yet my-thoughtreverted to the builders in the dark world below, 
where, if they can build nothing other than their own good or evil destiny, 


All are architects of Fate 



Working in the walls of Time, - 


Broken stairways-where the feet Stumble, as they seek to climb . 

But my flame-shod guide beckoned me, and, remembering that before I could carry light into that 
tenebrous realm I must go on to the measure of perfect man, I followed him . 


IV. 


He led me forth and up a great winding stairway to the next landing of the vast . Hall, to the Lodge 
of the Geometricians, and twice was I conducted around its galleries as though the better to adjust 
myself to that loftier plane of being. Presently, after due preparation and carrying my candle as 
passport, I was granted admission to its central chamber . And there the . Hierophant, whom 
previously I had met as ,the Great Architect, now manifested to me in a different and higher guise, 
as the Grand Geometer. 

Now He stood in the midst of a triangle of three great lights, and presently these, too. He gathered 
into His hand where they blended into one which He placed in my other hand, so that now I stood 
bearing a pair of candles, one a lesser light that shone but as the moon, and one a greater that blazed 
as the sun shining in his strength. And I was made to know that I should need both these lights upon 
the path that still lay before me . 

And when the greater light was placed in my hand my previous illumination seemed but as 
moonlight in comparison with that which now came to me, and what had up to that moment seemed 
to me vacuous space I now perceived to be thronged with an innumerable concourse of great beings 
greeting me into their company, each holding a hand high aloft and chanting over me in chorus 
Sun, stand thou still in his heights ; and moon, stand thou still in his valleys, until all his enemies be 
overcome in the great day of his perfecting !" 

And the Great Initiator placed his hand within his own bosom and drew forth a chalice of red wine 
and, holding it forth to me, said .- -"This is My life-blood, given for you that yours may be made 
Mine . Take, drink !" 

And I drank, and gave thanks, and was dismissed to pursue my way . 

Hitherto I had perceived as it were with but outward sensible eyes, and had gazed upon but the 
outward forms and surfaces of what I saw. Now , at this draught of new wine, my inward 
intellectual eyes became opened too, penetrating beyond all forms, beholding their animating 
essence; seeing not separate existences and objects, but all life, all objects, in inseparable unity 
.Here was what Socrates so rapturously tells of in Plato's Phoedrus-and I knew that, to tell it, he too 
must have been called to this same place and been granted this same measure of initiation-that it is a 
region of which no earthly bard has ever yet sung or ever will sing in worthy strains, one where for 
the :first time one comes to know real existence, colourless, formless, intangible, visible only by the 
topmost crest of the human mind, the noetic intelligence that sits at the helm of the soul and that 
alone can share communion with Divine Mind; that cognises the essential sub-stantiality , as 
distinct from the accidental properties and attributes of things; no longer thinking of what is just, 
strong, beautiful, righteous, and so on, or of any contrasted relationships, but directly beholding 
Wisdom, Strength, Beauty, Goodness, in their absoluteness and in their real essential being. 

Here, too, I saw the prototypal "ideas" lying behind the patterns and models shown to me in the 
workshops of the Architects below, and realised the geometrical and mathematical principles upon 
which those fabrications were based, and how that every created thing is made by measure, number, 



and weight, as the Initiates of the Pythagorean School made known to men in the outer world, so 
that of a verity I saw that even the hairs of our head are numbered- not in the sense of being counted, 
but of existing conformably with mathematical necessity, -and that not a sparrow falls to the ground 
apart from that necessity or without recording a fact of, and a change in, the Universal 
Consciousness . For on this plane where, as Plato declared, "God geometrises," the Divine Ideas are 
assi milated by the Geometricians who there labour continually, and thence are transmitted to the 
Lodge of the Architects below for expression in concrete form . And long would I have lingered 
here absorbing these inexhaustible wonders, but again I remembered my pledge and my directions, 
and besought my guide to lead me onwards. 


y. 


But how shall I relate what next befel me ? How voice that which is of the Silence ? I had been 
already led through two new supernal planes of being, one devoted to the building of form, the 
other to formless self- subsisting principles and abstractions-the ethereal embryos conceived by the 
Geometers, to which it was the function of the Architects to provide objective embodiment. Now I 
was to pass to a height surpassing, transcending, both these ; one where there existed neither the 
formal nor the formless, but as it were a primal Chaos from which both had issued and into which 
both were resolvable ; a Matrix beyond thought, beyond imagination, beyond description ; and 
whilst within me was a great urge of my spirit to go further forward and enter it, there yet fell upon 
me for the first time in that realm of bliss and peace, of colour and sound, of bodily Strength and 
mental clarity , an apprehension that the limits both of my endurance and conscious possibility had 
been reached, that I could neither know nor bear more than I already knew and bore, and that to 
attempt to advance farther was presumption and foolishness destined to end in failure and disaster . 

"Let strength be perfected out of weakness!" said my guide, reading my thought; "Come, let us go 
up the Hill of the Lord !" Once more his strong arn was around me, and holding my lesser and 
greater candles, my moon- light and my sun-light, in either hand, I ascended with him towards the 
third and topmost storey.of the great Aula. 

As we mounted, the path became less and less clear ; as a highway, leading into open country, 
terminates in a mere track which finally disappears entirely. And despite the brilliance of the two 
lights I carried, a twilight seemed to be descending upon us that deepened more and more around us 
as we rose, until, on reaching a level landing, nothing about me remained visible, or only the most 
shadowy outlines of what was immediately adjacent. 

Although within a building, the building itself no longer appeared as such, but to have become 
dissolved into something different, indefinable, indescribable-mere "place," to which no epithet or 
attribute can be attached; no corridors, no departmental chambers, such as I had found on the foors 
below; no sign of life or activity , but utter desertedness and dereliction, and yet, ijthal, a sense that 
life abounded there upon all sides . Yet thrice was I escorted around what, had it been a visible 
quadrangle, would have been its four sides, as though to habituate myself to these new conditions . 

Deep silence and solitude ruled up here in this dark polar region of the human mind, and here the 
great music that flooded the lower altitudes failed, it seemed, to reach, as though the air was too 
rarefied for it longer to be audible or my hearing too gross to respond to it . At times we seemed to 
be in a dense forest, to be passing beneath the dusky boughs of giant cedars of Lebanon and other 
mighty growths . At length I enquired of my guide what this place was. 


"This," he answered, "is the House of the Sons of the Widow" ; and then for the first time a mighty 
emotion swept through and shook even his strong frame, as he murmured, rather to himself than for 



my hearing, the words, "Sub umbra alarum Tuarum, Jeheschuah !", as though he too longed to 
dwell for ever in that place of deep shadow. 


And my thought turned to the remembrance of a teaching concerning the bereft Divine Wisdom, the 
Sophia, the Bride widowed through the ages of Her errant sons until, reverting from the ways of 
foolishness, they voluntarily return to sonship and She becomes justified of Her children . 

We halted, at length, at a place at which, in the gloom, showed the outline of two pillars standing 
side by side, separated only widely enough for one man to pass between. From here, my guide told 
me, I must proceed alone, since he could accompany me no farther ; but he would prepare me for 
my entry into that final sanctuary and would wait without Apocalypsis until I rejoined him. 

Then he began upon me a great and solemn ritual of preparation . 

He took from my one. hand the great solar light it carried, and placed the candle in a sconce at the 
head of one of the pillars in front of me ; and then took from my other hand the lesser lunar light 
and set its candle in a similar sconce at the head of the other pillar ; repeating, the while, with 
intense earnestness the words : "Thou, sun, stand still in his heights ; and thou, moon, stand still in 
his valleys, till his enemies be overcome in the great day of his perfecting !" 

He divested me of all my garments, save one only the Apron with which the Great Hierophant had 
invested me in t}- .e Lodge below. For my other garments, ethereal though they were, were as the 
outgrowth of my own nature, the condensed exhalations of my own thought and desire, now 
become objective and clinging to me as raiment ; and of these I must needs stand denuded if spirit is 
to meet Spirit and, out of my flesh, I am to see God . But my Apron no other hand could take from 
me than that which gave it, and it remained around my loins to be my strength and support in that 
day of my perfecting . 

Then, from an overhanging tree, he plucked a feathery spray of acacia- leaf and, after weaving it into 
a fillet, placed it around my head, saying as he did so :_c Thou art crowned in the halls of death that 
hereafter thou may'st wear a Crown of Life that fadeth not away ." 

Further, he took the golden caduceus or thyrsos he had always carried, and, standing before me, 
raised it aloft, as a crucifix is held before the eyes of the dying, and exclaimed : 

"Receive this Golden Bough, thou branchlet of the eternal Life-Tree, and think upon it when thou 
hangest upon that Tree, that thou may'st become for ever grafted thereinto, and thy leaves and fruit 
thenceforth be for the healing of the nations!" 

And by a gold cord he placed it upon me, so that it hung suspended against my flesh as a pectoral 
cross . 

Then, with his forefinger, he sealed me at five points with the sign of the cross ; upon my brow, 
upon my throat, upon my heart, upon the palms of both my hands, and upon both feet. And after 
each sealing with the cross-sign, he sealed me again at the same points with a peace-kiss, as though 
with his lips to heal wounds which his finger had made ; and he said :"Thou art wounded in love in 
the house of thy friends that by love thou may'st be made whole . These be thy five points of 
perpetual fellowshipwith Love Immortal ; that in love thou may'st think, may'st speak, may'st feel, 
may'st act, may'st walk, when thou goest forth among the sons of men ." 

And having thus done, he turned from me and passed to the twin pillars standing in front of me . 
There, kneeling between them and with a hand laid upon each, as though to unite them in himself, 



his voice pealed forth into the distance beyond :-"In strength have I striven to establish this son of 
Thy House, that he may stand firm and steadfast in the great day of his at-one-ment with Thee, 

Most High!" 

Finally, he rose, and taking his rod or wand, passed behind me, so that I saw him no more. But I felt 
his presence, and that from it was now issuing an energy that was directing, compelling-even 
propelling me forward ; an energy at once of will and of prayer, -of will that absorbed and gave 
direction and intensity to my own will, of prayer that shielded me from all evil as that will urged me 
on into the valley of the shadow of death ; an energy, silent, yet of such gathering intensity that, l ik e 
a great sea-wave rising to the breaking-point, I knew it must at last break into sound, and that that 
sound would carry me forward with it. 

Presently it broke . It broke upon my hearing, upon my whole being, as one great clear word of 
power, the vibrancy of which swept me onward . What that word was cannot be related, nor did I 
then understand it. But as it translated itself at that moment to my understanding, it was the 
heartspeech of my directing guide saying : 

"Father, into Thy hands I commend his spirit, which is also my spirit!" 

And, impelled by that word of power, I passed forward along the straight and narrow way between 
the lighted pillars, into the gloom beyond . 


VI. 


The ground beneath my feet rose steeply . I felt myself to be ascending a hill in that dusk and 
stillness, though for some distance a state of twilight remained to me ; for memories and remnants 
of the light that had previously suffused me lingered, and the great twin candles I had borne to this 
point still cast helpful beams of from the pillar-tops for a little way . But the farther Light I 
traversed, the higher I mounted, their illumination diminished, until at length twilight melted into 
utter dark. I remembered and comforted myself with, a great word : "The sun shall no more be thy 
light by day, neither the moon by night ; but the Spirit shall be to thee an everlasting light, and thy 
God thy glory ; and the days of thy travail shall be ended ." I knew what others have recorded of 
passing into the Divine Gloom, the agnosia of the human spirit, where vision fails and thought is 
paralysed, and where that zero-point of consciousness must be touched where nothing is known to 
be, neither one's self, nor even God ; and I knew, and again tried to comfort myself with the 
reflection, that even this appalling darkness was in fact light, albeit light of intensity so unthinkable 
as, to eyes not yet opened and inured to it, to appear as darkness . But I had yet to learn that even 
such comforts as thought and memory provided were staffs that must fail me of support . 

In that darkness I now was . -In the rarefied atmosphere of the mount I was ascending my being 
took on an ever-increasing hyper-sensitiveness, until I felt my flesh, even the tenuous ethereal flesh 
of my present body, dissolving away, leaving me as but a quivering structure of exposed, 
unprotected nerves . The feathery fillet of acacia- leaf upon my forehead felt now as a heavy crown 
of coarse thorns clamped upon my brow, into which the tender, delicate frond-points pressed l ik e 
steel spikes . The light gold thyrsos suspended from my neck became as an heavy cross, beneath the 
intolerable weight of which, with bleeding feet and hands, I toiled and staggered upwardly . I 
paused awhile to rest and with my forefinger swept, from time to time, the increasing blood and 
sweat from my brow and in my agony cried aloud : 


Come to my help, ye Sons of the Widow ! for I, too, am the Widow's son . 



But no answer, no help came ; yet the oftener I lingered, the more I faltered, the more conscious 
became I of the propelling urge of that mighty word of power by which my guide had sped, and still 
was speeding, me upon my willing quest ; and I knew that from a distance-how far, how short, 
mattered nothe still was watching, directing me ; that his rod and staff controlled and safeguarded 
me . 

In the ocean-depths there is a point at which a sinking ship can sink no farther, the pressure upon it 
from above and the resistance from below so counteracting each other that it remains suspended and 
undergoes disintegration by the dual forces grinding upon it. In the ocean-depths of Universal Spirit 
there is a corresponding point of equilibrium, where the human soul, seeking to pass from terrestrial 
attraction to spiritual freedom, becomes caught and ground between similar upper and nether 
millstones . That point is the mystical Gethsemane, literally "the place of the wine and oil press," 
for there the soul reaches the equator-line where the opposing attractive forces of soul and spirit 
meet, and where the former experiences to its joints and marrow a sundering of its parts . There-as 
wheat is winnowed from corn-stalk and chaff, as wine and oil are distilled from crushed fruit the 
soul's spirit, its sublimated, refined, immortal essence, is dissected from the sheath in which it has 
matured, is separated and rendered free to commence a new independent life of its own, whilst that 
sheath itself is left to perish. 

That Gethsemane I had now reached . My soul consciously knew the growing division of its 
kingdoms, "one dead ; one powerless to be born and again and again cried in its anguish for help 
from the Widow's Sons, yet without avail ; and at last resigned itself to the compelling word and 
will that it felt still to urge it forward, higher . 

Beyond Gethsemane rises the Hill Calvary- Kranion or Calvaria, the bald headland, the rocky 
summit, of no earthly situation, and known to none save the naked human spirit which ascends to it, 
there to be lifted up high above all terrene ground and magnetic attraction, and pass to birth and 
apotheosis in the free uncontaminated air of Spirit Absolute. 

Reaching that summit, my limbs failing under me, one thing alone saved me from complete 
collapse, the strength and support that came, that seemed newly and increasingly generated, from 
the Apron girt about my loins . And then, from that central peak, my feet involuntarily losing touch 
with the supporting ground beneath, I felt myself lifted up above the earth . 

No hand there was that touched or raised me . As one whose limbs become distended, rigid, under 
the infusion of a strong electric current, so now the charge of the Creator Spiritus passed into me, 
forcing my frame into vertical erectness and rigidity, extending my arms horizontally, making taut 
and tense under its strain every fibre of my being . In mid-air, my head held toward heights I could 
not reach, my feet down-pointing to the earth they no longer touched, my arms wide-flung 
transversely into void space, I hung suspended upon that invisible impalpable Life-Tree ; myself a 
cross ; myself the crucified upon that cross. 

For three hours of darkness-hours not of human time, but of that Spirit to which a day is as a 
thousand years-I hung upon that cross, that Stauros upon which from the foundation of the world 
Life Creative hangs self- immolated, that worlds may be built upon its pattern and Life Created be 
fashioned at last into its image. 

As there I hung, my thorny crown stabbed its spikes more deeply, more insistently, into my brow, 
my hands unable longer to move and wipe away the blood and sweat. Yet a joy began subtly to 
tincture and relieve that pain, as I realised that, under the same strain that my own being knew, the 
life- sap of the fragile acacia- sprig was also being quickened, was pulsing fast, striving to break to 



golden bloom ; and that, when that bloom broke, light would break for me also and my crown of 
thorns become a crown of life. 


The gold thyrsos upon my breast burned itself into me, until its vertical shaft felt one with my own 
spinal column, from the base of which the uprising intertwined serpents were as dual streams of a 
new, larger, richer vitality surging upward through my nerves towards my head, where I knew that 
l ik e the dual parts of an electric current that, meeting, flash into light-they would eventually 
combine and flame to conscious wings, wide- spreading as those of its symbol, far-reaching as my 
own wide-flung arms . 

And my Craftsman's Apron, at once a weight and a support to my straining loins, felt growing into 
me, to be becoming of my very flesh and substance. I knew now why, traditionally depicted as a 
loin-cloth, this garment alone was worn upon the Cross by the "King of the Jews," the Supreme 
Chief of all Initiates, and why all the great painters of the Crucifixion-scene had been moved, 
intentionally or inspirationally, so to depict it and not otherwise, not from any paltry motive of 
delicacy or prudery, but to point, for those who can understand, the truth that the secret, basic, 
generative energies procreating the Universe and regenerating human souls must ever remain 
beyond the ken of all but the Divine Eye . 

As with the dying, my consciousness fluctuated from a negative to a preternaturally acute and vivid 
stage, ranging at times to a wild yet orderly delirium ; yet from both these extremes I knew the 
necessity of holding my will oriented and fixed upon its desired goal. At times it became cosmically 
comprehensive ; at times it would focus upon trivialities and irrelevances. At one moment it would 
enlarge till, for the little leaf-crown on my head, I wore vast star-belts as a diadem ; great 
constellations filled no more space than the palms of my hands and swam around my person as but 
dancing fire-flies ; my trunk and legs reached down through abysmal leagues of space to the dust- 
speck of earth below my feet . 

At another the heavens would open and expose their joyous contents-a lure and temptation promptly 
to be rejected as often as it recurred ; for, though I thirsted, it was for richer wine than they could 
give to drink. Now each hair of my head seemed a filament and conduit linking me with angel- hosts 
and reservoirs of supernatural intellectuality, and now the nerves of my feet ramified into the finest 
rootlets and tentacles through which I became aware of the activities of nature and of life in the 
earth below and the minutest details of personal human interest . I heard the crackle of growing 
grass, the twitter of birds, the cries and laughter of children, equally clearly with the throb of 
engines, the activities of industry, the clash of armies . No grain of sand, or speck of dust, or cell of 
tissue, but disclosed its constitution, its potencies, its purpose, its destiny ; all straining, striving, 
building, unbuilding, rebuilding ; each sealed with and bearing, wittingly or not, its little cross in 
one universal effort to become raised to that final cross of transformation upon which I now hung, 
and thence to pass on to unimagined heights and destinies beyond . Even my Brother builders in the 
symbolic Craftfor of them too I became vividly aware in their little dark circumscribed world 
below, -there theywere in their Lodges, reeling off memorised rituals, correcting one another at a 
wrong or misplaced word supposed to affect the efficacy of their work ; and some were in banquet 
halls, and, amid the pop of champagne corks, I heard them toasting one another, extolling the 
virtues of Masonry, shouting, "Prosper the Art!" and singing of the "mystic tie" thatmore truly than 
they know binds all together and advances the building of a Temple conceived of as yet by but few 
of them . 

Darkness, over- intensified, at last of itself becomes as it were a pleasurable light ; pain, when ability 
to feel it is exhausted, a measure of joy ; for these opposites are but relative, the poles of a single 
fact ; differing reactions to enforced environment . But neither such light nor such joy was that I 
longed for . They belonged to feeling, to desire, to thought ; not to that deeper factor, the Spirit, 



which transcends them all, and to which I strove to keep my will one-pointed . But at length feeling 
died in me ; I knew neither pain nor joy . Then desire died ; what happened further to me, good or 
ill, I cared not. Lastly, thought died also ; its Bickerings and veil-wisps gradually falling away, till 
stark blankness only remained . Nothing of me still was, save the labouring spirit that strove to be 
born but could not. It was the zero-point of negative consciousness, the moment of the apparently 
everlasting NO ; where nothing is, and God is not. Eloi, Eloi ! Lama Sabachthani ! 

VII. 

I revived, yet not I, at length, in Light ; a new indescribable light, so much more than light because 
it is also life ; life beyond the category of personality ; life in the Universal Spirit of light ; 

Light rare, untellable, lighting the very light ; 

Beyond all words, descriptions, languages ! 

The sprig of acacia had at last burst to golden flower upon my head. 

No tongue may or can speak, nor pen write, of that "sleep in Light" as the Egyptian records call it, 
that conscious rest of the soul in God, that identic union between finite object and infinite Subject, 
that nirvanic absorption of the spirit's still flame within the Lire of Divine Mind, of the human 
water-drop in the ocean of that Immaculate Illimitable which is Nothing, but without which nothing 
is-that impersonal yet self-consciousness which becomes possible only when every activity of sense 
and emotion has been quelled, every energy of the restless mind stilled, all thought obliterated ; and 
the babe-soul rests upon the naked bosom of that Spirit of which it has been well written : 

I am the Silence which is more than Sound . 

If therewithin thou lose thee, thou art found ! 

The Nameless, Shoreless Ocean, which is I, 

Thou canst not breathe, but in its bosom drowned ! 

What previously had seemed utter darkness was now a sea of softest light thronged with life ; living 
light, lighted life. About me thronged the uncountable Sons of the Widow, God's Master Masons, 
the Lords of Wisdom and sharers of the secret counsels of the Most High, whose inspirations, 
transmitted to the Geometers and Architects upon the planes below, dictated the plans upon which 
worlds are built, maintained, dissolved, and yet are but as foam upon the rising and falling waves on 
the surface of the Universal Life-stream. 

And these great Sons, close present to me through my long agony, but invisible till a deeper sight 
was born in me that could share their intenser light, took me down from my cross ;-but of the 
secrets and mysteries that thereupon became known to me I do not here speak, nor of the still higher 
grades of Initiation that lie beyond that I now testify to . When eventually I left them, I passed 
through their ranks, as I had passed through them upon my arrival when to my unperfected eyes 
they had appeared as a vast forest of Libanus cedars under whose swarth boughs I had walked ; for 
were they not as great trees crowning the mountain-top of the world, diffusing over it from their 
spread branches the dark actinic rays of a Wisdom not yet recognised by men's imperfect vision as 
Light ? I rejoined my former brother and guide at the point where I had left him, between the pillars 
. Upon seeing me he at once greeted me with a familiar sign in sympathy with my now vanished 
sufferings, and, kneeling, at the next moment shielded his eyes with his hand as my presence 



dazzled him with the light it now radiated. Then he rose, and bowing, drew near me and offered me 
his hand as a Brother of the Third Degree in that Grand Lodge, and as we embraced he exclaimed : 

"The Master is risen !" 

And I to him responded : "He is risen indeed!" 

And we passed back down the grand stairway, up which he had previously brought me, now no 
longer deserted, but thronged with Geometricians and Architects come forth to hail their new 
Brother, now journeying back as a light-bearer into outer dark world . And, upon rolling organ- 
music once more, came the chanted words "To him that hath overcome is given a crown of life!" 
and again, "To him that hath endured to the end is given a white stone !" 

At length we reached the place where, in the gloom, still lay my sleeping body, couched upon a 
stone . But peering down upon them the stone was no longer a dark crude mass. It was a crystal 
cubical stone, upon the top of which rested three cornucopias, bearing corn, and wine, and oil ; and 
against this, my stone of destiny, reposed my head, already faintly aureoled with light . My 
coronation was complete. 

I knew that henceforth both my guide and my stone would be perfectly identified with me and that 
the contents of the cornucopias were the. emblems of my perpetual future nourishment and 
represented the harvest I had garnered in each of the Three Degrees I had just taken ; Bread of 'Life 
from the first, Wine of Bliss and Illumination from the second, Oil of Wisdom from the third. Here 
was the realisation of the familiar words, hitherto but fanciful poetic imagery :"Thou preparest a 
table before me in the presence of mine enemies ; Thou anointest my head with oil ; my cup runneth 
over!" Again my good Brother gripped me as a Master Mason. We drew together in an embrace of 
fellowship so fervent that we seemed to coalesce beyond the possibility of further separateness. "A 
measure of corn for a penny," he said to me, "and see thou hurt not the oil and the wine ." And I 
understood his hint to be prudent in my use of them . 

"Ave, Frater, atque Vale!" were his last spoken of words to me. 

And mine to him were "Vale, Frater, atque Ave!" 


When I looked about me with the eyes of my flesh I was alone. Sunrise was breaking over the 
barren heath. 



THE MASONIC INITIATION 


THE PAST AND FUTURE OF THE MASONIC ORDER 

CHAPTER IV 

W. L. WILMSHURST 


"First, that which is natural ; after, that which is spiritual . " 

THE PAST 

Beginnings, whether of nations, religions, institutions, or even of the world and life itself, are 
notoriously obscure and difficult of precise fixation . The reason is that nothing actually "begins" to 
be, but there merely takes place a transformation into new conditions of something that pre-existed 
in other conditions . Call the point or moment at which the change occurs a "beginning" if you wish 
; it will be found that such beginning is but an effect generated by, and issuing from, anterior 
causes. Life itself does not, at physical birth, begin to be ; it merely then enters physical conditions 
and assumes physical guise . A corresponding change occurs at the birth or beginning of human 
institutions ;-they are developments and formalizations of something which previously existed in a 
fluid incohesive condition . This is the case with Masonry, and accounts for the tradition that it is as 
old as man himself, whatever forms it has assumed, and that it is of Divine origin . 

Modern Speculative Freemasonry had a beginning in the early years of the 8th century, but only in 
the sense that in 1717 originated that which afterwards developed into, and now subsists as, the 
English Masonic Constitution . Masonry itself existed long before that time, and in two forms : -(1) 
exoterically, in the Operative Building Guilds, and (2) esoterically, in a variety of secret 
communities of mystics and occultists, having no relation to the practical building trade but often 
using builders' terminology for symbolical purposes of their own . 

Modern Masonry is a blend of both of these ; its constitutions, charges, rituals, and instruction 
lectures incorporate elements drawn from each of them . The Ancient Charge, for instance, which is 
delivered to every Masonic candidate on admission to the Order to-day, is an example of what has 
come over from the Operative Masons . It is patently an instruction of the kind one would expect to 
find given to a youth on becoming entered as an apprentice to a handicraft and embarking upon 
adult and civic responsibilities ; it is a mere admonition to him to be a moral man, a worthy citizen, 
a creditable workman and member of his trade-guild, to fear God, honour the King, love his 
country, and generally educate and improve himself. It does not contain the least reference to any 
knowledge or wisdom of an extraordinary kind, or suggest any vestige of acquaintance with 
subjects of a mystical or occult character . 

But on turning to the ceremonial rituals, especially that of the Third Degree, and to the "Traditional 
History" and instruction lectures, we find, mixed up with references to the Operative Builders' 
trade, matters of a highly esoteric and mystical nature, having no possible operative or materialistic 
connection and not to be thought of as associated with the technical equipment of a workman in 
material stone and brick . 


This esoteric element descended, of course, not The Past from the Operative Guilds, but from less 
public organizations of symbolic . or mystical Masons, and it is the latter alone whose necessarily 
obscure history and purpose repay investigation at this time of day. 

These organizations were the representatives of a stream of Hermetic tradition and practice, the 
upper reaches of which go back into pre-Christian times, into Egypt, and to the Rabbinical mystics 
and Kabbalists, among whom existed a secret, guarded lore of the Cosmos and of human life ; a lore 
which found only partial, though cryptic, expression in the Hebrew Scriptures in terms of building . 
With them the building and the subsequent vicissitudes of Solomon's Temple (whether this was 
ever an historical material erection or not) provided a' great glyph or mythos of the up-building of 
the human soul, whether considered individually or collectively ; and as the course of Hebrew 
history advanced and the stream of circumstances and mystical tradition widened into its Christian 
development, the same symbolic terminology continued to be used . Accordingly the Gospels, the 
Epistles, and the Apocalypse are found to teem with Masonic imagery and allusions to spiritual 
building . It is in these that the human soul becomes expressly declared to be the real Temple pre- 
figured by the previous historic or quasi-historic one . A spiritual Chief Corner-stone, rejected of 
certain builders, is mentioned ; one in which the entire social fabric is -to grow together into a 
single universal Temple . St. Johii himself, as the "beloved disciple" or most advanced Initiate of 
the Christian Master, becomes, according to the esoteric tradition, his Chief Warden and entrusted - 
as every Senior Warden in our symbolic lodges is with the task of keeping order in the West and, 
after the days of his flesh, of occultly controlling from the heavens the development of the law of 
Christ in the Occidental world. Hence he became, and still is acknowledged as, the Masonic Patron- 
saint, and is found spoken of in the Rosicrucian reference in Dante's Paradiso as 

He that lay upon the breast 

Of Him who is our mystic pelican, 

And from the Cross was named for office blest ; 

whilst one of his known pupils, St . Ignatius-who is reputed to have been the little child whom the 
Lord once took and set in the midst as a type of fitness for realizing the kingdom of heaven- is found 
expounding religion in these purely Masonic terms "Forasmuch as ye are stones of a Temple which 
were prepared beforehand for a building of God, the Father, being hoisted up to the heights by the 
working -tool of Jesus Christ, which is the Cross, and using for a rope the Holy Spirit ; your faith 
being a windlass, and love the way leading up to God . So then ye are all Companions in the way, 
spiritual temples, carrying your Divine principle within you, your shrine, your Christ and your holy 
things, being arrayed from head to foot with the commandments of Christ ." (Epistle to 
Ephesians.) 

The pronounced Masonic imagery used by Ignatius (who was martyred at Rome in A.D ,io7) tends 
to corroborate the tradition that the Square, Level and Plumb-rule, now allocated to the Master The 
Past and two Wardens of a Lodge, were originally associated with the Bishop, Priest and Deacon, 
when serving at the secret altars of the persecuted Christians . Put together, the three tools form a 
Cross, which, on the worshippers being disturbed by the secular authorities, could quickly be 
knocked apart and appear but as builders' implements . 

The most popular religious book of the earliest Christian centuries was The Shepherd of Hermas, a 
collection of teachings, visions and similitudes, couched n terms of Masonic allegory and veiling 
(as the title implied) the hermetic or esoteric instruction of some "Shepherd," as the Hierophants 
and Adeptteachers of the Mysteries were, and in the canonical Scriptures are, uniformly designated 



To define the position which, after the event known as the Christian Incarnation, seems to have 
been assumed by all the mystical Builders, the spiritual Alchemists, the Rosicrucians, and the divers 
other schools of the secret Gnosis who accepted that fact as the central pivotal one of human 
spiritual evolution and the culmination of earlier Mystery-systems, it may be said that they regarded 
themselves as one great Fraternity, in the Divine Mysteries under the unseen but actual guidance of 
Jesus Christ, "the Carpenter" (Tekton), as Supreme Grand Master, with the greater Initiate, St. John 
the Divine, and the lesser Initiate, St. John Baptist, as Senior and Junior Grand Wardens ; the winter 
and summer solstices (the times of the sun's lowest annual declension and meridian height) being 
allocated to the two latter as festival days or time-points peculiarly favourable for spiritual contact 
between the Grand Lodge Above and the lesser Lodges below. 

All down the stream of history will be found the similitude of the human soul to a stone and 
directions for working it from a crude to a perfect state. The career of the patriarch Jacob begins 
with a stone. The Dervishes of the Arabian Desert are given a cubed stone smeared with blood on 
their initiation. The sacred object and palladium of the Moslem faith is the Kaabeh or Cubical 
Stone. The stone is found described as Lapis exilis and Lapis ex Coelis; it is always one said to 
have come from heaven, whence it is now in exile in this outer world. As a protest against 
materializing the idea of it, one finds exclamations such as Cornelius Agrippa's famous 
Transmutemini! Transmutemini in viventes lapides! -become ye transformed into living stones! 
Those more advanced mystics, the spiritual Alchemists, have provided us with a wealth of obscure 
lore concerning the "Stone of the Philosophers" ; and all through the Christian centuries, behind the 
activities of public elementary religion and the official work of the Church, can be traced evidences 
of this higher, esoteric, more abstruse and difficult work of mystical Masonry and stone- working 
being wrought by abbots, monks, and laymen, either in solitude or communities of less or greater 
size, yet in severest concealment. 

The history of this movement in England cannot be written in detail here, but a few points of it may 
be cited as evidence of the fact that, beyond all operative-trade connections, the primary work of 
Masonry was one of mystical religion and had to do with the arcana of the human soul ; that it was 
an intellectual and a spiritual science promoting the development of the individual initiate and, 
through him, the advancement of the general weal . 

The English Masonic Constitutions of 1784, for example, reproduce a memorandum "concemynge 
the Mystery of Maconrye," said to have been written early in the 15th century by King Henry VI 
with his own hand-probably for private rather than for state purposes, since he himself is alleged to 
have been made a Mason. Transposing his words from archaic into modem English, the King's 
memorandum indicates as follows :-that Masonry is a spiritual science ; that it originated in the East 
(in both a mystical and a geographical sense) and reached the junior human races in the West 
through travelling Phoenicians (misdescribed as "Venetian") ; that its development had been greatly 
advanced by Pythagoras (curiously mis-called by the English names "Peter Gower"), who, after 
receiving his own initiations, founded the great Crotona school and instructed others in the science ; 
that the science itself involves knowledge of and power over hidden forces of Nature, so that the 
expert Mason can perform acts which to the uninitiated would appear miraculous ; that progress in 
the science comes by instruction, practice and silence ; that the science is to be imparted only to 
worthy and suitable men, since abuse of it and of the powers arising with it would result in both 
personal and general evil ; that Masons understand and can effect the art of alchemic transmutation 
and possess a universal symbolic language of their own by which they can intercommunicate, 
whatever their race or country ; that they have the "skill of becoming good and perfect," apart from 
all motives of fear and hope such as influence lesser minds and are held out by popular religion ; 
that not all Masons realize their attainments or become perfect, for many fail in capacity, and more 
still in the arduous personal effort essential to the acquisition of this wisdom . 



The genuineness of the King's memorandum has been questioned, though prima facie it is well 
attested . But whether a genuine script of his or not, its contents, within their limits, accurately 
represent the nature of Masonry itself. 

No one can read English or European history from the period of that memorandum onward without 
realizing that to that history there has been an inner side not cognized or treated of by academic 
historians, or without feeling behind the march of external events-and as it were connected with or 
even directing them-the concealed presence of minds more than normally capable-initiates, 
possessing and wielding the very powers testified to in Henry Vi's memorandum . The lives and 
literary remains of such men as-to name no others-Paracelsus, Abbot Tritheim, Basil Valentine, 
Jacob Boehme, George Johan Gichtel, Thomas Vaughan, and Elias Ashmole, provide above-surface 
indications of a strong current of sub-surface activity, a current of which no record exists or is ever 
likely now to be made . But to that current one must look for the perpetuation of the secret Masonic 
science, and to its projection, in a highly diluted and elementary form, into publicity in modem 
speculative Masonry . 

The religious Reformation of the i 5th century was the first great episode in a far-reaching 
revolutionary movement in the intellectual, social and political life of the West, a movement the end 
of which is not yet. Amid the intensifying unspirituality and materialism of the times and the 
impending disintegration of public instituted religion, a decision seems to have been come to by 
some far-seeing enlightened minds to put forward the old mystical Gnosis and tradition in a simple 
form and to attempt to interest a small section of the public in it . This suggestion is incapable of 
rigorous proof, and will perhaps commend itself only to those who are in any measure conscious of 
the inner mechanism controlling the visible clock-face of historic events . But be this as it may, we 
find, about the year i 600 and onwards, the first small signs of a movement that has eventuated in 
the vast modern Masonic Craft, with its as yet further indeterminate possibilities . 

The first recorded reception of a non-operative Mason to an operative Lodge occurred at Edinburgh 
in I600. The Operative Lodges were then becoming obsolete and defunct, and by 1620 Operative 
Masonry had become entirely superseded in London by Speculative, the members of the former 
working no longer in guilds but striving still to keep alive their old form of fellowship . The first 
traceable initiation, on English soil, of a non-operative Mason occurred at Newcastle in 1641 ; and 
the secondzthat of Elias Ashmole, already a student of arcane science-at Warrington in 1646. 
Accretions to the ranks of the Craft proceeded to be made, but were at first few and gradual, owing 
to disturbed political conditions. The Charter of the Royal Society, dated 1663, as drawn up by Dr. 
(afterwards Sir) Christopher Wren, seems to have been prepared with a view to giving official 
sanction not to science as at present secularly understood and pursued, but to science of a more 
occult character such as Masonry as before defined deals with, for the preamble of that document 
refers to private meetings of certain men devoted to the investigation of the "hidden causes of 
things" in the public interest . 

In 1717 four old London Lodges combined to constitute a new nucleus. From them the first Grand 
Lodge was formed and thus Modern Masonry was born, at an inn, the Apple Tree Tavern, in 
Lincoln's Inn Fields . 

In 1721 Dr. Anderson was entrusted with the drawing up of the Constitutions of the new 
community. The conditions of the Craft in that year may be deduced from a statement of the 
eminent antiquary Dr. Stukeley, who writes: "I was the first person made a Freemason for many 
years . We had great difficulty to find members enough to perform the ceremony . Immediately 
after that it took a run, and ran itself out of breath through the folly of its members ." 



Abuses supervened from the admission of all and sundry without due qualifications . In 1724 a 
Brother protested in a public journal that "the late prostitution of our Order is in some measure the 
betraying of it . The weak heads of vintners, drawers, wigmakers, weavers, etc ., admitted into our 
Freemasonry, have not only brought contempt upon the Institution, but do very much endanger it 
In the same year was established "for poor brethren" the first benevolent fund, which since has 
developed into the great Charity organizations now connected with the Craft. In the course of the 
next fifty years the numbers of the Craft so increased that central headquarters were found 
advisable, and on May-day of 1775, the foundation-stone of the present Freemasons' Hall in 
London was laid with great ceremony . Despite the fact that men were being admitted to the Order 
who were little qualified to appreciate the science of Masonry, and that consequently the 
understanding of that science was becoming increasingly debased, elements of the original intention 
still remained, and echoes of it can be caught in some of the recorded incidents of the occasion . In 
the Foundation-stone itself was inserted a plate perpetuating the event and the names of the then 
Grand Master, his deputy and the Grand Wardens ; and stating that Masonry was of heavenly 
origin, "descendit e ccelo" ; and concluding with the maxim of Solon in Greek characters, "Know 
thyself." At the religious service performed upon the occasion was sung an anthem of praise to the 
Great Architect : 

"Who deign'd the human soul to raise 
By mystic secrets sprung from heaven 

whilst a specially composed ode affirmed of the new Aula Latomorum that : 

"Religion, untainted, here dwells ; 

Here the morals of Athens are taught ; 

Great Hiram's tradition here tells 

How the world out of chaos was brought ." 

From these extracts it is clear that, at least to its leading minds. Masonry was a secret science of 
soul-building, and that the great central legend and mythos expressed in the Traditional History in 
the Craft's Third Degree referred to no events in earthly time or history, but to Cosmic events of a 
metaphysical and mystical character . Further, from the preface to the Constitutions of 1784 it is 
made clear that the practical builder's art is to be considered only as the substratum of Speculative 
Masonry ; that the history of the Operative side is negligible, for when Speculative Masons became 
a separate body of men the science had no further concern with practical building ; and that the 
Speculative work is a personal mystical one, rising l ik e a pyramid "tending regularly up to a summit 
of attainments, ever concealed by intervening clouds from the promiscuous multitudes of common 
observers below ." 

Freemasons' Hall being completed, it was, on 23rd May 1776, triply dedicated, again with great 
ceremony ; firstly to Masonry ; a second time to Virtue ; and a third time to Universal Charity and 
Benevolence. The last-named of the three purposes came in course of time to dominate completely 
at least the first of them . The Craft became a great money-raising institution for relieving its own 
needy members and their relatives, and as a charitable society does excellent work which 
commands the devoted interest of many good Brethren who know nothing, and seek to know 
nothing, of Masonry itself in its only proper and primary aspect of spiritual science, and who regard 
it merely as a luxurious item of social life and maintain their connection with it solely from 
philanthropic motives . 



From the facts thus roughly outlined it is clear that the pre-1717 Brethren were men of a very 
different calibre, and held a vastly higher conception of Masonry, from those who subsequently 
came to constitute the Craft and have expanded it to its present great dimensions. Of the latter class, 
whatever their merits, virtues, and good works in other respects, they cannot be said to have been 
either theoretic or practical 'mystics or to have cultivated the knowledge of Masonry as that science 
must be primarily understood . They cannot say of themselves as their predecessors truly could and 
did 

We have the Mason Word and second sight, 

for growth in the life of the spirit and the enhanced faculty and inward vision that come therewith 
have not been within the ambit of their desire . As one of the most deeply learned and 
understanding writers upon the subject afhrms, (the authoress of A Suggestive Inquiry into the 
Hermetic Mystery) "The outward form (or present practice) of Masonry is too absurd to be 
perpetuated were it not for a certain secret response of common sense to the original mystery. The 
Initiated moved one another on by words of power . The Masons ape this but have lost the magic 
key to open the door into the Hermetic . garden. They want the words, which are only to be found 
by seeking them in the subjective fundamental life, from which they are as far out as the tools they 
use. The true tools also may be found on the way in ; they will be given one after another as they 
are wanted ." Another learned author, who had every motive to speak well of the Craft-the late 
Brother John Yarker-was constrained to write in 1872, in his able and most instructive Notes on the 
Scientific and Religious Mysteries that : "As the Masonic fraternity is now governed, the Craft is 
fast -becoming -the paradise of the bon vivant, of the charitable hypocrite who forgets the version 
of St . Paul and adorns his breast with the 'charity jewel' ; (having by this judicious expenditure 
obtained the purple, he metes out judgment to other brethren of greater ability and morality but less 
means) ; the manufacturer of paltry Masonic tinsel, etc. No other institution is so intrinsically 
valuable as Craft Masonry, or capable of such superhuman things . As now governed, few societies 
perform less . None profess such great objects ; few accomplish so very little real and substantial 
good . May reformation be speedy and effective !" 

Such facts are not pleasant to contemplate, nor would they be proclaimed here without good 
purpose and a constructive motive . But it is well to face them before proceeding further, since what 
remains to be said will not only deal with a happier aspect of the subject, but is based upon the 
premise that the otherwise deplorable perversion and materialization of the true Masonic intention 
has been both an inevitable and a necessary prelude to a spiritual efflorescence which in due course 
will manifest itself and of which the beginnings are already perceptible. 

In no censorious or reproachful spirit, therefore, are such observations as the foregoing recorded. 
They might indeed be extensively amplified if to do so would serve any useful purpose, but no one 
with intimate experience of the Craft will fail to recognize either their truth or the cogency of their 
reproach . It is undeniable that, through ignorance of the true principles of Masonry, the Craft has 
suffered itself to become debased and overrun with members lacking alike the intellectuality, the 
temperament, and the desire, to appreciate those principles . To-day's newspaper, for example, 
contains the advertisement of a turf bookmaker who proclaims himself to be "on the square," and on 
the strength of that qualification seeks to engage the services of a betting-tout . It is well known that 
commercial houses to-day find it advantageous, for business purposes, to insist upon their more 
important employees being members of the Order. In the Order itself advancement is notoriously 
connected with social position and the extent of a member's contributions to the Charities . 

Honours, and even medals, are bestowed for money payments to this or that subscription list . Any 
man with a title, from a mayor to a prince, needs only to be a Mason a matter of months to find 
himself elevated to some figurehead position in the Craft, without the least merit of a purely 
Masonic kind or any understanding of the science itself. The central ideas and teachings of the Craft 



are left unexplained ; ceremonies are discharged quite perfunctorily, and with the majority are of 
entirely subservient importance to the indissociable feasting and wearisome rounds of 
speechmaking that follow ; and the general ignorance of Masonic truth provides ample scope for the 
self-assertion of men whose ideas of moral grandeur and Masonic virtue are evidenced by an 
ambition to attain office in the Craft and to adorn their persons with as much purple and jewellery 
as they can acquire. 

It is all woefully wrong and misconceived. Of course worthier traits exist. The heart of English 
Masonry is sound, if its head be obtuse and muddled and the work of its hands not of the character 
it might and ought to be . 

When the worst has been said that can be charged against the methods of modern Masonry, it 
amounts merely to an exhibition of venial human weakness, vanity and sycophancy, the growth of 
which, whilst obscuring and falsifying Masonic principles, has been due to failure to grasp what 
those principles imply and entail . Many tares have sprung up among the corn ; but good corn has 
not failed to grow, and that the two can grow together in the same field is a tribute to the richness 
of the soil from which both spring and the nourishing power of the Masonic intention, which, l ik e 
sunlight, shines impartially upon both and quickens whatever seed is sown within its field, whether 
tares or wheat . 

There are few received into the Craft to whom Masonry does not bring, if but dimly and 
momentarily, some measure of new vision, some impulse towards its ideals ; few who do not feel it 
to contain something far greater than they know or than appears upon its surface-presentation . 
Moreover, in the deep heart of every man exists a responsiveness to ultimate truth, and a fondness, 
amounting sometimes to a passion, for it when expressed in ceremonial grandeur and 
impressiveness ;-a sub-conscious reminiscence, as Plato would explain, of truth and glories it has 
once known and must one day know again, and which Masonic ritual does something to revive, as 
was of course the intention of all the Initiation systems of the past and is still the intention of our 
present Order. And how often one finds minds which are denied, or which would repudiate, the use 
of symbolic ritual in their Church, leap to it with admiration and affection in their Lodge, as though 
the Protestant rejection, in the religious sphere, of the rich symbolism and sacramentalism wisely 
once devised for instructing eye, ear, and mind, and exalting the imagination towards spiritual 
verities, had starved them of their rightful nourishment. It is not surprising that to many such minds 
Masonry becomes, as they themselves say, a religion, or at all events a precious fact to which their 
souls respond however inarticulately, and that for them the door of the Lodge is, as was once said of 
the Altar-rails, "the thin barrier dividing the world of sense from the world of spirit ." 

THE FUTURE 

In the fact that, amidst so much imperfect apprehension of its meaning and intention, Masonry 
should not only have survived, but should continue to make an ever-widening appeal to the 
imagination, exists the proof that, inherent in it, however deeply veiled, is a vibrant, indestructible 
vital principle which awakens a never- failing response, whether loud or feeble, in its devotees . The 
Light is in the darkness, though as yet that darkness comprehendeth it not. The modern Craftsman 
may not as yet "have the Mason Word" in his own possession, l ik e his earlier Brethren; but, 
nevertheless, that Word itself abides within the Masonic system, and he faintly hears and responds 
to its overtones; it is, for most, a Lost Word, but it patiently awaits recovery; and many to-day are 
impatiently seeking to find it. 

That vital principle became implanted in the Order system by those wise, far-seeing, now 
untraceable minds which, as we have said, some three centuries ago conceived and inspired, if they 
did not directly devise, the formation of the Order as a means of perpetuating in an elementary way 



the ancient Secret Doctrine through a period of darkness and disruption, and until such time as that 
Doctrine, and the Mysteries that once taught it, can again be revived in a larger way. 


The evidences of the presence in the Masonic system and texts of the ancient arcane teaching are 
threefold. Firstly, the grading of the system itself into the three traditional stages of spiritual 
perfecting, involving in turn the discipline and purification of the body and sense-nature; the 
control, self-knowledge and illumination of the mind; and, finally, that entire abnegation of the will 
and death of the sense of personality which lead to union with the Divine Will, beyond personality 
and separateness. Secondly, the incorporation of the myths of the building of Solomon's Temple 
and the death of Hiram, both of which are allegories and portray not historic, but metaphysical, 
truth of profound importance. Thirdly, the insertion into the texts of the Ceremonies and side- 
lectures of a number of pieces of esoteric teaching common to all the Initiation-doctrine of East and 
West, but not known to be such by the average Brother who is unfamiliar with that doctrine, and so 
cryptically expressed and so interwoven with more elementary moral teaching as only to be 
recognizable to the more fully instructed observer. Examples of this esoteric teaching and of its 
implications are given in the second section of this volume, dealing with "Light on the Way." 

The compilation of the text of the present Rituals and Instruction Lectures is supposed to have been, 
and no doubt was, undertaken in or soon after 1717, by Dr. Anderson and others whose personality 
is now of no moment. ( Royal Arch Masonry was introduced into England in 1778 by a Jewish 
Brother, Moses Michael Hayes ) Nor is it material to inquire how far those compilers were 
deliberately obscuring and crypticising occult knowledge they personally possessed or, if 
personally lacking it, were unconsciously ' led into perpetuating greater wisdom than they knew. 

The subject has been ably and exhaustively discussed in a work of very high value to the Masonic 
student, Studies in Mysticism, by Brother A. E . Waite, who takes the view that the compilers did 
not for the most part know what they were doing, yet that they wrote as if guided by a blind though 
unerring instinct "which made even the foolish old scholars of the past see through their inverted 
and scoriated glasses something of what Masonry actually is, and therefore, in the midst of much 
idle talk, they provided, unconsciously to themselves, a master-key of the Sanctuary." 

This is probably a true verdict, for from various evidences Anderson and his colleagues show little 
signs of having been esotericists of any depth or ability. But, be it accurate or not, the fact remains 
that our system was so designed and devised as to be a true compendium of universal Initiation; one 
that reproduces the salient features of every system that has existed, or that elsewhere still exists, for 
advancing human perfecting. 

In that fact lies the strength, the vitality, the attractive power, of the Masonic system; the subtle 
charm that it casts over minds sensitive to its implications, but as yet unable to interpret them or to 
understand their own responsiveness to them. And in the demonstration and elucidation of the 
doctrine concealed in the system lies the hope of the Craft gradually educating itself and fulfilling 
its original design in the years now before it. 

The point up to which these observations are meant to lead can now be stated. It is that before the 
true spirit and inward content of Masonry could be appreciated upon a scale sufficiently wide to 
constitute the Order a real spiritual force in the social body (as one hopes and sees indications that it 
will become), it has been necessary in the first instance to build up a great, vigorous and elaborate 
physical organization as a vehicle in which that spirit may eventually and efficaciously manifest. In 
view of the importance of the ultimate objective aimed at, it matters nothing that from two to three 
centuries have been needed to develop that organization, to build up that requisite physical 
framework, or that the material of which it has been constructed has not been so far of ideal quality. 
With the larger prospect in view we can afford to look both charitably and philosophically upon 
momentary matters that may be regarded as regrettable and as falling far below the standard of even 



the surface and letter of Masonic principle; we can be content that the Order has been composed so 
largely of men little understanding or capable of assimilating its profounder purpose; that its 
energies have run off from their true channel to the subsidiary ones of social amenities and 
charitable relief ; that its higher ranks have been filled, not with adepts and experts in spiritual 
science, capable of ministering wisdom and instruction to the humbler ranks below (as the 
symbolism of our great hierarchical system surely implies their doing), but with "great kings, dukes 
and lords" and other social dignitaries, displaying no signs of possessing arcane wisdom and placed 
in their complimentary or administrative positions (which they nevertheless admirably and 
efficiently fulfill) merely to give the Order social sanction and-as the nauseous doggerel runs" our 
mysteries to put a good grace on 

The growth of a great institution-a nation, a Church, a system of the Mysteries-is a slow growth, 
proceeding from material apparently unpromising, and involving continual selection, rejection, and 
refining, before something becomes finally sublimated from it and forged into an efficient 
instrument. To take the most appropriate analogy, the erection of Solomon's Temple was a work of 
years, of diversely collected material and engaging numerous interests ; but not until it was 
completed, dedicated and consecrated as a tabernacle worthy of the Shekinah, did that Presence 
descend upon it, illumining and flooding , the whole House and enabling the earthy vehicle to fulfil 
a spiritual purpose. 

So now, too, with the Masonic Order. As a physical vehicle, a material organization, it is as 
complete, as elaborated and as efficiently controlled, as perhaps it can ever be expected to be. It 
now stands awaiting illumination. That illumination must come from within itself, as the Divine 
Presence manifested within the symbolic Temple. The Order awaits the liberation and realization of 
its own inner consciousness, hitherto dormant and repressed by surface-elements now proving to be 
of no, or of illusory, value. No sooner is the deeper and true nature of the Masonic design revealed 
to Brethren than upon all hands they leap to recognition of it and desire to realize it ; and, for such, 
there can be no going back to old ways and old outlooks . The people that have sat in darkness have 
seen glimpses of a great light; they will now cultivate that light themselves, and be the means that 
others behold it also . In this way the Craft throughout the world will become gradually regenerated 
in its understanding and so fulfill the destiny planned for it by those who inspired its formation 
three centuries ago. And it will become in due course the portal to still higher and more important 
spiritual eventuations. 

The coming change must be and will be worked out, not from anything emanating from the higher 
ranks of the Craft the Grand Lodge and Provincial Grand Lodges but from the floor of the 
individual private Lodge. For the private Lodge is the Masonic unit. The higher ranks are but 
recruited there from at present for complimentary or administrative purposes, although when the 
time comes for those hierarchies to realize their own symbolic value, it will be their members who 
will descend upon the Lodges of common Craftsmen, no longer as makers of merely complimentary 
speeches, but as real authorities upon Masonic wisdom and instructive missionaries and purveyors 
of Masonic truth . The private Lodge is the point from which the transformation must be achieved. 
One such Lodge in a town or district, that applies itself to Masonic work upon the lines indicated in 
these pages, will be as a powerful leavening influence and set up wholesome reactions in 
neighboring Lodges. Some resistance, and even derision, may be anticipated at first from those 
content with old standards and not yet ripe to appreciate a higher one, for the "nations" of less 
refined understanding may always be expected to "rage furiously together" at any suggestion 
involving departure from habitual methods or implying a possible reflection upon their wisdom. 
This, however, can be met with patience and charitable thought, and will soon disappear before a 
quiet, resolute adherence to principle. Moreover, the problem of the admission of unsuitable 
applicants for membership of a Lodge will soon settle itself when the standard of Masonic 
interpretation has been thus raised. 



Let it here be emphasized that nothing in this volume is intended to advocate the least departure 
from or alteration of current ' Masonic working, or any deflection from loyalty to established usage 
or the governing authority. Those forms are so efficiently contrived, so perfectly adapted to the 
work of the Order, that, save perhaps in a matter of detail here and there, they can be altered only to 
their disadvantage and at the peril of disturbing ancient landmarks fixed where they are with greater 
wisdom than is perhaps at present recognized. Even as things are, in the haste to get through - 
ceremonial work as quickly as may be, there is an unfortunate tendency already in official quarters 
to clip and curtail certain ceremonies, thereby depriving the Brethren of some valuable and 
significant pieces of ritual which, if continued to remain unworked, will soon become obsolete and 
forgotten. 

Nevertheless, a little flexibility in matters of Lodge procedure would be permissible and is even 
desirable when Degrees are conferred . Merely to reel off a memorized ritual in a formal, 
mechanical way too often results in but mechanical effects, and the subject of the Ceremony goes 
away perhaps unimpressed or bewildered. There is nothing 'to prevent the delivery of the official 
rite being supplemented by unofficial words of explanation and encouragement such as would lend 
that rite additional impressiveness, a more intimate and personal bearing, and awaken in him who 
undergoes it a more deep and real sense of becoming vitally incorporated into living truth and into a 
Brotherhood to whom that truth is no mere sentiment but a profound reality. Moreover, with a view 
to inducing favorable atmosphere and conditions for the conferment of a Ceremony, before the 
candidate enters, the assembled Brethren should always, be notified from the Chair that they are 
about to engage in a deeply solemn act which claims the concentrated thought and aspiration of 
each of them, to the intent that what is done and signified ceremonially may be realized spiritually 
in both themselves and him to whom they desire to minister . Further, the ceremonial preparation 
of the candidate before being brought into the Lodge should be treated, not with levity or as a mere 
incidental formality, but as a profoundly sacramental act, in the significance of which both the 
officiating deacons and the candidate himself should be instructed. Let all Brethren be assured that 
there is no detail of Masonic ceremonial but is charged with very deep purpose and significance ; 
this will appear to them more and more fully and luminously in proportion to their faithful endeavor 
to realize the intention of even simple and apparently unimportant points of ritual. 

Sundry other matters may here be mentioned as deserving the consideration of the Craft. 

The first is the co-ordination of the Rituals with a view to securing uniformity of working and 
instruction throughout the Craft, coupled with a certain but slight amount of desirable revision. 

An official standardized Ritual would be beneficial and would no doubt be widely adopted even if 
its adoption were left optional to Lodges preferring to continue their present form of working. Upon 
all new Lodges, constituted after the date of standardization, the official working should be 
imposed, so that, in course of time, virtual uniformity of procedure would be achieved. The present 
divergences in the working of Lodges are not great and are easily capable of adjustment so as to 
secure a common footing of work throughout the Craft. Some Lodges use points of working not 
used in others and which they are rightly jealous in desiring to conserve; for example, many Lodges 
neither work nor know of the traditional five signs connected with the Third Degree, and merely 
communicate three of them, omitting two which are of great significance. On the other hand, some 
Lodges retain details brought over from the Operative bodies, details now obsolete and without 
moment to Speculative Masonry and which nowadays might well be dropped. The "Ancient 
Charge" delivered to Entered Apprentices on their reception, is an instance of an Operative 
tradition, for which, if it be not abandoned altogether, an alternative Charge, more suited to present 
conditions and more in consonance with Speculative Masonry, might well be substituted. For a 
Charge that was intended for, and that was delivered to, youths upon entering an Operative Building 
Guild is unsuited to men already immersed in civic, family, and business responsibilities, and 



seeking now to acquire knowledge of a purely mystical character; it is absurd and grotesque . to 
counsel a middle-aged experienced man to perform elementary duties of citizenship, or to express 
to-perhaps an ecclesiastical dignitary who joins the . Order, the hope that he "will become 
respectable in life"! 

Revision of the Rituals would, of course, be a delicate task; one not to be undertaken at haphazard 
or to meet the chance whims and uninstructed notions of this or that Brother, but one calling for the 
enlightened guidance of minds conversant with Initiation-science; otherwise the Craft may lose 
more than it may gain, and good plants may be pulled up and thrown away in mistake for weeds. As 
an example of a point needing revision and excision, let me instance those passages in which a 
candidate is enjoined to extend charity and relief to those needing it "if he can do so without 
detriment to himself or connections." These qualifying words surely vitiate the whole spirit of 
"Charity" If Charity means anything-and mere financial help is not charity, but only one form of its 
practical manifestation it involves a wise but unstinted selflessness, a self-sacrifice at whatever 
personal cost. To hedge round that supreme virtue with a cautious verbal reservation in one's own 
favour is a limitation entirely unworthy of Masonic magnanimity and the words come as a shock to 
one's moral sensitiveness. 

To come to the next point the Festive Board. In previous pages it has been indicated that the 
customary practice of refreshment and social conviviality is not only practically useful, but has a 
deep sacramental value. It is, of course, technically extra-Masonic and non-official, or perhaps 
quasi-official; but it provides real and useful opportunities for fraternizing, and intellectual 
opportunities for enlarging upon Masonic matters not dealt with in the Lodge sanctuary itself ; 
whilst, in its symbolic and higher aspect, it illustrates that relaxation from labor, and that 
refreshment derived from the inter-communion of those united in a common work, which in the 
providential order are arranged for us both in this life and hereafter . 

The value, or otherwise, of the Festive Board, depends, therefore, upon its good use or its abuse. If 
it be regarded and used as the natural extension of the more formal work of the Lodge, it can 
exercise a ministry of great service; if, on the other hand, it be but an occasion for junketing and 
social frivolity under the cover of Masonry, but with little or no Masonic relevance, it is apt to 
become a thing of reproach; the sublimities of the Lodge- work are falsified by it and any good 
issuing from that work is forthwith neutralized. The test of true Masonic devotion and sincerity 
would be the honest answer each Brother can give to the question: "How far would my interest in 
Masonry extend and continue, if the practice of the Festive Board did not exist and Masonic 
proceedings were confined to the formal work of the Lodge?" With this reflection the matter may 
be left to the good judgment of the Craft. 

There must also be mentioned a question which has already rankled as a thorn in the side of Grand 
Lodge and will doubtless become still more troublesome- the "Women's question"; and if I 
approach it, it is not with the idea of presuming to offer suggestions to the governing authority of 
the Craft, but of defining the position for the guidance of the average Brother. 

As things stand, Grand Lodge is the trustee of a system which it has inherited, which it is pledged to 
continue upon established lines, and which it has no power to alter if it wished, save at the request 
and by the common consent of those whose interests it exists to conserve. It has no power to 
sanction the admission of women into the order, nor is there any desire in its ranks that it should; 
indeed the fact that women can to-day take elsewhere precisely the same degrees as the Craft 
confers is a fact unknown to the majority of Brethren. 

Whether Grand Lodge should extend official recognition to societies professing to be Masonic and 
admitting members of both sexes is another matter, and depends upon the view to be taken of the 



regularity or irregularity of the societies in question. Can such societies produce satisfactory 
evidence of their regularity and right to recognition, or have they sprung into existence through the 
treachery or disloyalty of members of the Craft? That is not a question falling to the present writer 
to determine, nor has he sufficient material before him to do so. The only conclusion he can come to 
for himself, and the only advice he can offer to others, is to abide loyally by the existing ordinances 
of the duly constituted authority. The Craft so far has been the "Men's House," and must so remain 
until such time as circumstances-which do not now exist and for a long time to come are unlikely to 
exist-clearly warrant a departure from the present position. It may be that the "Men" do not make 
the best use of their "House"; it may be that the now banned societies have sprung into existence 
because of that fact; it may be-and there are grounds for supposing it that in those societies Masonry 
is worked with greater decorum, a far fuller understanding, a deeper reverence and appreciation of 
what it implies, than in the orthodox Craft. But the fact remains that we are committed and pledged 
to our own Constitution for the present and we shall do neither it nor our individual selves a service 
by departing from strict loyalty to it. 

Upon the general question of the fitness of women to receive the Masonic or any alternative form of 
Initiation, I must record an affirmative conviction of the same strength-as the negative one I make 
to the suggestion that women should be admitted to the Craft or that visiting relations between the 
latter and the unauthorized societies should be sanctioned; for, in existing conditions, such 
relationship is undesirable and might prove disastrous to both. Although the sexes meet upon a 
common footing in the field of both religious and secular affairs, and - although the whole modem 
tendency is towards equality of rights, function and responsibility. Masonry at present stands 
outside both the religious and the secular categories, and by the majority of its members is viewed 
merely as a social luxury and a casual appendage to other activities of life. Until it is accorded a far 
higher appreciation than this, until it can be viewed from a standpoint not merely of ordinary 
morality -but from one involving a high standard of personal sanctity; until the mental conception 
of it is sufficiently lofty and compelling to neutralize emotional frailty and the chances of moral 
lapse, Masonry is far better reserved as the "Men's House," even though that House be, in the 
prophet's words, one "of untempered mortar" and lacking the advantage of feminine association . 

The human soul is essentially sexless, yet to the feminine side of humanity is notoriously credited 
exceptional intuitive power and capacity for the finer apprehension of truth, and upon this account, 
in the days of the Eleusinia, women were never excluded from initiation into the Mysteries, but 
were allotted special rites of their own, and, in the processions of the Thesmophorim, passed along 
the public street bearing upon their heads the volumes of the Sacred Law, -an eloquent symbolic 
tribute and testimony to the superior power of the feminine understanding to intuitise the finer sense 
and implications of that Law. It was to a woman-the mysterious Diotima of Megara-that the amazed 
Socrates owed his supreme initiation into that last Mystery of Love about which he speaks in the 
Symposium with such awe and moving eloquence; yet a woman with whom stands exhibited, in 
purposed contrast, that opposite pole of womanhood the futile, mindless Xantippe whom he had 
wedded. There have been Egerias, Aspasias and Hypatias, besides those known to history; and 
Dante's hierophantess, Beatrice, -but types that "eternal womanly" which, Goethe truly divined, 
always exists with us to lead the male intellect ever upward and on. It is almost needless to point to 
the mass of work done by women still living in the exposition of mystical philosophy and religion, 
or to say that such great mines of instruction in matters of Masonic moment as Isis Unveiled, The 
Secret Doctrine, and A Suggestive Inquiry into the Hermetic Mystery, have come from the pens of 
women learned and enlightened in things pertaining to the Craft to a degree seldom evidenced by its 
own members. 

In every interest, then, it is desirable that the "women's question" should rest where it is. Nothing 
can prevent those, of whichever sex, who are really builders in the spirit, from privately fraternizing 
in that spirit. To such, formal collaboration, however agreeable it might be were it permissible, can 



be dispensed with, for their work is not dependent upon facilities of a formal character, and they 
will be the first to recognize the wisdom of Order accepting and the expedience of conforming to 
current technical necessity. When the time and conditions arrive for present barriers to be removed, 
it will be because the Craft itself will have removed them by entering into a fuller realization of its 
purpose than now obtains, and because Grand Lodge will have been influenced to alter its laws by 
an authority higher even than itself-the Grand Lodge Above. 

To pass now from these considerations of things of the moment to the larger vista towards which 
those things are leading, what is the prospect before the Order? 

That prospect is perhaps sufficiently indicated by the familiar words written at the head of this 
paper: "First, that which is natural; after, that which is spiritual." For nearly three centuries the Craft 
has been developing from a small germ to a great robust body characterized by tendencies of a 
purely natural kind, manifesting natural human weaknesses, and displaying the inexperience, the 
irresponsibility, and the limitations of outlook common to all youth. It has meant well, even when it 
has misconceived its purpose. If it has provided a field in which numbers of men, blind to the 
Order's real significance, have sought merely social amusement and personal distinction, it has also 
proved a source of light and guidance to many obscure souls not subject to those vanities and who 
have realized and profited by its implications, and some of who from the portal of the Craft, have 
passed on in silence to more advanced methods or colleges of spiritual instruction. A sacramental 
system is not invalidated by the default of those accepting its jurisdiction; and as saints often 
flourished in the Church amid most unsaintly conditions, so not a few Masons have won to the 
Light despite the surrounding darkness of their Brethren. 

But now is coming 'a change, and it is significant that it comes not from the higher ranks of the 
Craft where, with all desire for the Craft's best interests, every tendency is towards conservatism 
and the sufficiency of old standards, but from the rank and file, from the younger, newer blood now 
- flowing into the veins of the Order. It is, of course, not a movement even remotely resembling 
disaffection, but now, as never before, Brethren in numbers are asking from Masonry bread of life; 
they are caring less and less for ceremonies and ancient usages unless these can be shown to have 
supporting justification; they look to the leaders and 'teachers of the Craft for, not a perpetual 
reiteration of complimentary but unsatisfying speeches, but for instruction in real Masonic light and 
wisdom. 

The future of the Order cannot be appraised without reference to the general social life surrounding 
it; for it is not something apart and detached from that life but an integral element of it, and between 
the two there is perpetual interaction and reaction. The gradual disintegration of the Churches 
affects the- Craft, tending both to increase it numerically and to advance the exploration of its 
concealed spiritual resources. Religion will not die-the religious instinct -can never die-nor will "the 
Church" in some form cease to exist and to fulfill a certain ministry . But today a supplementary 
form of ministry is required and Masonry can provide it. A regrouping and redistribution of energy 
is taking place, in the course of which we may come to find that that powerful psychological 
phenomenon, a new group-consciousness-the Masonic consciousness- has been in process of 
formation; a consciousness which may become in time as potent a factor as was the Church- 
consciousness of mediaeval days, or as was the moral power of the Delphian Mysteries during the 
seventeen centuries of their great influence. 

When the time ripens, the Mysteries-as a science of life and an art of so living as to qualify for- 
attaining ultra-natural life-will come to be restored. For long past, both within and without the 
Church, the tide of human persuasion and events has been deadest against the tradition of 
regeneration into that ultra-natural life, as originally taught and practiced. But that which has been 
is that which, in the course of cyclic recurrence, shall be again, and upon a higher level of 



development than before. It is not that the Christian Church is not a steward of the Mysteries-or at 
least that portion of it which does not reject the authentic sacramental signs and channels through 
which those Mysteries may be realized, but, from reasons too complex and lengthy here to detail, 
there has been failure -on the human side to realize them, as they are now presented, with the result 
that the Christian Ecclesia has degenerated into a state analogous to that into which the pre- 
Christian Mystery- systems had fallen when the new era began. To the clear-seeing eye the 
narrative in the Gospels, apart from all questions of historicity, is a drama of Initiation written for 
that time, for every eye to see, and for every mind to profit by ; for what previously had been but 
adumbrated and approached by a few individuals in the concealment of the Mystery-schools, 
became, at the Incarnation, objectified, universalized and made generally accessible;- in other 
words the Gospels became a manual of Initiation- instruction to the whole world according to the 
measure of individual capacity to receive it, notwithstanding that large tracts of knowledge 
remained unproclaimed in those Gospels but were reserved for more private communication. The 
recurrent cycle of the Church's year, with its feasts and fasts, its 'symbolic seasons pointing to 
inhibitions and expansions of the soul's consciousness, is a true chart of the path to be followed by 
those who themselves seek initiation under the mastership of the Great Hierophant and Exemplar of 
regenerative science; while in the Sacrament of the Altar is portrayed, albeit under different 
symbolism, the actual process of Initiation and the same transmutative changes in the body and 
mind of the recipient as are emblematized to the- Masonic candidate in the Craft Degrees. 

Truth remains static, although temporal expressions and ministries of it follow the temporal order, 
and are born and die. When this form of the Mysteries becomes neglected or abused, or that steward 
of them decrepit or ineffective, another- in the Divine providence and patience-stands ready to carry 
forward their torch; truth becomes "fulfilled in many ways lest one good custom should corrupt the 
world." The Masonic system was devised three centuries ago, at a time of general unrest and 
change, as a preparatory infant-school in which once again the alphabet of a world-old Gnosis 
might be learned and an elementary acquaintance made with the science of human regeneration. 
However misunderstood and misapplied, however materialistically conceived, have been its rites, 
the soul and consciousness of every voluntary participant in them stands imperishably impressed 
with the memory of them. The maxim "Once a Mason, always a Mason" expresses an occult truth 
not realized by those who are unaware of the subjective value and persistence of one's deliberated 
objective actions; though the Church implies the same truth when it deems the act of sacramental 
baptism to bring a given soul within the fold of Christ for ever. In each case, and especially so 
when the deliberate will of the neophyte assents to the act, a new addition is made to the group-soul 
of the community into which the individual becomes incorporated ; and, in the case of the Masonic 
initiate, the aggregate and volume of what we have termed the Masonic Consciousness is enlarged . 
Reactions and consequences follow of a nature perhaps too abstruse to dilate upon here, but to 
which the Roman Initiated poet referred in the well-known words: 

Magnus ab integro saeclorum nascitur ordo . 

Iam redit et Virgo ; redeunt Saturnia regna ; 

lam nova progenies coelo demittitur alto . 

Meanwhile, tinctured and affected by this metaphysical influence from the subjective world, the 
work of the Craft proceeds within this bourne of time and place; beginning, as we have shown, 
crudely and following the grosser tendencies of the natural order, until a moment is reached when a 
new birth becomes possible. Then the natural gives way to the spiritual, and the great material 
organization, a "body prepared," becomes the requisite physical vehicle for a correspondingly great 
office as a minister of real Wisdom. 



Operative Masonry preceded and became spiritualized into Speculative, and the gross beginnings of 
the latter are now becoming sublimated into a more subtle conception and tending to a scientific 
mysticism at once theoretic and practical. We may look forward to the gradual increasing 
spiritualization of the Craft and to its becoming-in a future the nearness or distance of which no one 
can presume to indicate-the portal to a still more advanced expression of the Sacred Mysteries. For, 
foretold the Great Master, the time will surely come when in the present ways of neither this 
"mountain"- neither this Church nor that Craft-nor any Jerusalem that now serves as a place of 
peace, will men worship the Universal Father, but after another manner and mystically, that is, after 
the manner of the eternal Mysteries. "For salvation is of the Jews," He added, and it has previously 
been explained that by "Jews" is implied the Initiates of those Mysteries, acting under the Grand 
Mastership of Him who was named "the King of the Jews." 

The Churches, therefore, may be left to continue to discharge their proper ministry, whilst those 
who feel the need of a larger science, an alternative and perhaps richer fare than the Churches 
provide, may find it in the ancient Gnosiss to which Freemasonry serves as a portal of entrance. By 
following the path to which that portal leads, they may be brought to a deeper knowledge of 
themselves and of the mysteries of their own being ; to which end, and which end alone, the 
Masonic Craft was designed . That Craft will only become what its individual members make it. If 
they see in it only a ceremonial procedure, at such it will remain, and their initiation will be but one 
in name and not in fact. But if they strive to realize and make their own the living spirit and 
intention behind the outward rites and formal usages, the dramatized quest of Light and of the Lost 
Word may result for them in a blessed finding of that which they profess to seek, and what they find 
themselves they will become able to communicate to other seekers, until the Craft is justified of all 
its children, and itself becomes-as it was intended to become-a great light in a dark world . 



THE MASONIC INITIATION 

Postcript 


W. L. WILMSHURST 


And now let me close this book, as every Lodge is closed, in peace and concord with all my 
Brethren, and with the ancient prayer that the Order may be preserved of God, and its members be 
cemented with every virtue . If, in what has here been written, Masonry has been given a conception 
spiritualized beyond the measure of its common understanding, I have but followed the example of 
our Ancient Brethren, who, lifting up their eyes to hills whence cometh strength, wrought their 
Masonic work upon the highest eminences of the mind and discerned the Mysteries of the Craft, not 
with eyes of the flesh, but with the vision and understanding of the spirit. And they it was who 
perpetuated for us of later time an Order and a Doctrine by the right interpretation and use of which 
we, too, might ascend where they had risen, and from the same Mount of Vision behold the same 
things that they had seen. 

Few, perhaps, ascend to those high hills to-day, in this more than usually troubled and dark age. But 
some are ready and eager to do so, and for them especially it is that this book is written. All must 
ascend thither at last. But, at the moment, the World-spirit is dominant in all our institutions. 
Wisdom is little apparent; for want of vision the people perish ; and the quest of Light has to be 
pursued under conditions of peculiar adversity . But there is a mystery of Darkness no less than one 
of Light, and, in the moulding hands of the Great Architect of the House of Life, the darkness and 
the light are both alike and serve as twin pillars that, finally, will establish that House in strength . 

Those, then, who cannot, or are not yet prepared to, mount the higher path of understanding the 
things of the Craft, must nevertheless be thought of in charity, and spoken of in faith and iii hope. 
For, placed as we all are in different and unequal degrees of perception upon the chequer- work floor 
of Life, around all alike-black and white, wise and foolish, learned and uninformed— runs the 
unifying, surrounding skirtwork and border of 'a common Providence; about us all are flung the - 
Everlasting Arms ; whilst, from the mutual interplay of the light and darkness in us all, becomes 
gradually generated the realization of that Wisdom in which, even now, we are all one, though of 
that unity few as yet are conscious . And since Wisdom will at last be justified of all her children, 
we need not complain of her processes, which, as they work out through the ages to a beneficent 
conclusion, temporarily involve the sharp and painful contrasts that we find. 

Twenty-four centuries ago, at a time of similar darkness and degeneracy to the present, an aged seer 
and golden-tongued poet, who through a long life had contemplated the Ancient Mysteries of Light 
and Wisdom, spoke of the difficulty of conveying them to a world not yet able to appreciate them ; 
and yet recognized the truth that, in the opposition -of the World-spirit to them, the Divine purpose 
was nevertheless being effected. In sending forth this book, then, and exhibiting the Mysteries of 
Masonry in a light towards which, doubtless, some who read it will not at once be responsive, let 
me appropriate that poet's words, and welcome any inappreciation of what I have written with the 
same serenity as his ; the same confidence of forward-looking faith in its ultimate acceptance : 

Knowledge, we are not foes ! 

I seek thee diligently; 

But the World with a great wind blows, 

Shining-but not from thee ! 


Yet blowing to beautiful things, 

On, amid dark and light.; . 

Till Life, through the trammellings 
Of laws that are not the Right, 

Breaks, clean and pure, and sings 
Glorying to God in the .height . 

—Euripides, Baccha ; (trans . Murray) .